Newest Scam: Fake Escrow Accounts
MImeKillEr writes "MSNBC is running an article warning about the latest auction site scam: Fake escrow accounts. The article claims scam artists are tricking Net users into wiring thousands of dollars to fraudulent bank accounts. The criminals do this by setting up a trap auction and when the winner asks how to make a payment, the criminal tells them to pay into an escrow account. One legit escrow account who had a criminal mimic their site said that as many as 50 users had lost and average of $10,000 with at least one being conned out of $30,000 in such a way. There are reportedly at least 150 fake escrow accounts. The FBI is currently investigating the matter."
Where's the article link? .. It must have been auctioned off...that'd odd.
Fake escrow site scam widens
the problem i see with alot of these online auctions is the level of trust needed. Sure there are checks in place to try make sure everyone and everything is legit...but still, out in the land of the 'net, where anonymity is king, its not to hard to fix these kinds of things (and the impetus to do it is also high, because of this feeling on anonymity) and lets face it, there are lots of people out there that will fall into these traps....i dont feel too sorry for stupid people (at least, until i become one) but still, would this happen in a real life (ie, non online) auction
all you are, is all you are, i'm so sorry for you.
Being that the editors didn't provide one... I don't know if this is the same article, as it's dated July 3, but it's from MSNBC and relevant.
Link
What in an Escrow account?
Escrow services suck, and nobody should use them; here's why.
I buy something at an auction. I pay the escrow, and the seller sends the item and I receive it. However, I tell the escrow that I haven't received the item. I get my money back, and the item for free!
Escrows still rely on the truthfulness of the buyer.
And there's this fake escrow thing, too.
== Jez ==
Do you miss Firefox? Try Pale Moon.
Do they mean Accounts or Sites? I'm currently being "scammed" by a chap in france, who wants to buy 30 mobile phones off me. He insists we use www.golden-escrow.co.uk for "safety" and I'm playing along.
:)
;) )
I'm seeing if I can get him to wire me a £30 admin charge before we do business, after all, that's a drop in the ocean for him!
I'm actually quite impressed with the fake escrow site, the registration and setup process seems to work quite well. A few things give it away though, no real contact details, lack of SSL even though privacy policy mentions ecryption, and the fact the the scammer insists I use it of course.
I can see this as being so very dangerous for non-technical people. The scammers must be making thousands. The only thing we can do is to warn people.
A few tips:
* See if you can contact your trading partner on the phone or whatever BEFORE you do business
* DON'T send money outside your own country (especially not to Indonesia
* Only buy from people with positive feedback
* NEVER ship goods before you have Actual Money in your pocket
* Be suspicious of EVERYONE
I'll post a follow-up if I hear back from my scammer chap today!
Who saved the Slashdot editors time by not even posting a link to the article! Brilliant!
For those who actually want to RTFA:
Fake escrow site scam widens
Hint: Google News is our friend
I'm sorry, if you wire 30,000 dollars to any account after an auction without making absolutly certain that you're actually going to recieve the service you're paying for; then well, you're stupid. Simple as that.
:).
If this person had any good sense they would have mode darn sure they're not being scammed. If a person parts with 30,000 dollars this way than they deserve it. Perhaps they'll be more carful when bidding 30,000 dollars on an online auction.
Then again, I suppose the world is full of idiots... want proof? read Slashdot at -1
"Entropy is the bad-guy, and he is everywhere"
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't the best way to deal with this sort of problem is to stick with one or two "known good" escrow services? Make it a standard like PayPal or what not. All this scam-artistry certainly creates demand for such a service. Knowing eBay, they'll set up one of their own or buy somebody else's. On a side note: "A Fake escrow accounts"? Come on.
is catch all those fake-paypal scammers, the ones that send you a password request with from:paypal@paypal.com reply-to:dumbassscam@hotmail.com
How come it is so easy for a thug to make money, but a unemployed software engineer cant do it? Why is that? Does crime take a special function in the brain? is it like a complicated SQL database? If so I wanna program it so I can make money! it isnt fair!! Anyways thats my rant..
---
Heres some more info about this scan in case you're interested:
:)
Sos4auctions.com - Technical details about the scam.
Another Article - in case you DON'T want to support M$ by reading MSNBC.
The company supposedly running the scam - Hehehe... they use a Win2K server... lets see how fast it gets slashdotted
Thats all for now, good night everyone!
"Entropy is the bad-guy, and he is everywhere"
A smart escrow service designed to handle auction payments would: 1). Require the shipper to ship using a specific shipping service(such as UPS) that provides tracking information for the package. 2). Refuse to accept payment into the escrow account until the item has been shipped and a valid tracking # has been provided 3). Refuse to release the payment from escrow to either party until the package has arrived as per the sale agreement. Essentially, collaboration between the shipping service and the escrow service could provide more protection for the seller. This, of course, would rely upon the validity and consistancy of the shipping service's tracking data.
i am sad that perhaps they'll be more carful when bidding 30,000 dollars on an online auction :*(.
He can't get anyone to care. Not eBay for sure. Not the police, not FBI. He found out the scammers were working out of Romania and contacted their police, and hasn't gotten too far either. The scammers made it appear they were located in Minnesota. In the meantime he sees more auctions that look similar and contacted them with his same ID and addy, and they sent him details for payment, etc. They didn't even remember it was the same guy they scammed a few weeks earlier. They continue to operate and nail people over and over... (and since it wasn't a Mac laptop, he doesn't have that fanatical base of users to get help him either! :)
Let me take this opportunity to rant about the inequities law enforcement in this (U.S.) country. These are huge losses for individuals and when combined represent large sums of money overall, but law enforcement doesn't care. But you have some theoretical theft of a $18 CD and then we must throw the weight of the FBI after the P2P'ers. If a guy robs a 7-eleven of $20, he must spend 20 years in jail, but if a white collar criminal bilks several million bucks from a company, he gets a mild slap on the wrist, if that... If my house gets broken into and I lose everything, now the police don't even want to bother coming out to "investigate" the crime. They take a report over the phone and send you a police report for insurance purposes, but heaven forbid you don't come to a full stop at a stop sign or creep over the speed limit, because they are out there in full force ready to nail you with tickets.
And wiring money to a bank outside the country is always a bad idea, experts say.
As a rule, if you need an expert to tell you wiring money to a bank outside the country is always a bad idea, you're halfway to hopeless anyway.
Face it, anyone who wires $30,000 to an account at a bank they've never heard of, by request of an escrow company they know nothing about, because they want to buy a car over the internet, any one that flat-out, no-other-way-to-put-this, STUPID, deserves to be ripped off. Maybe it'll teach them a lesson.
Part of the article:
The criminals build elaborate fake escrow Web sites, with convincing names like Simple-Escrow.net and WhyEscrow.com.
Is it just me, or are simple-escrow.net and whyescrow.com still up? Were they using them as examples of legit or escrows or not? They're chock full of grammar and spelling errors ("simple-escrow.net, the most powerfull escrow service available on the net..." is their first claim, and whyescrow has a really bad flash intro...). Were these sites taken down? Did others take their place? Did some people read the article and decide to take those domains? So confusing...
Danish != nationality
i am sad that it's from MSNBC and relevant :*(.
i am sad that any one that flat-out, no-other-way-to-put-this, STUPID, deserves to be ripped off :*(.
i am sad that (that's the way for example credit card payments work) :*(.
Click here to see yourself. The first guy to post a complete list of all their username/passwords wins 30K!
SUCCESS BREEDS IMITATORS
The article mentions that success breeds imitators.
So MSNBC posts an article about a fake escrow site that SUCCESSFULLY stole $500,000. That's IMITATABLE
Thank you Mario! But our princess is in another castle!
In Soviet Russia, Accounts Escrow YOU!
I guess it has finally gotten to the point where there is no need to link the article as history shows noone ever reads them! :)
..mork
they are auctioning stupidity.. and people are actually bidding and consequentially paying up for it :D
I'm surprised that none of these users have sued.
|/________
|\A|ALYS|
Escrow is pronounced just as the french word "escroc", which means "crook"
No big surprise....
It happens all the time, people needs to be careful.
my sig
How do you think the "STRATEGIC MISSLE DEFENSE SHIELD if being funded. False auctions and fake escrows.
Hi, I'm Catalin Braescu, I'm from Romania. Maybe I can help - I dislike Romanian scammers twice: first for what they are doing and second because the reputation they build for my country prevents me to do as much business as I can.
My e-mail address is CATALIN at EDISON.RO
Best regards,
Catalin
Catalin Braescu
Ofaly.com
They still don't seem to understand that poor spelling and grammar are a tip off, even aside from the lack of SSL etc. It is extremely difficult to find any sort of scam on the web that is completely sound, from an English standpoint. The first person singular pronoun "I" is always capitalized in English. The capitalization on this site is inconsistent even across the front page (look in the FAQ box, top right.) In their FAQ, they have used the non-word "acceptation". Oooh--so close to plausible, too. Bummer. I'm sure that with a little more effort they could develop a really first-rate scam. Why can't scammers ever hire a proofreader?
By the way--has anyone turned them in to Western Union? They're using WU's logo on the front page.
~Idarubicin
I've used Escrow.com before and I'd use them again without hesitation. They're way better than just using PayPal.
Which scam do you mean? The fake escrow site, or those lame goatse redirects? Oh, you didn't read the comment you're replying to. I see!
I personally can't believe how many people buy/sell with Net auctions. I *never* use auctions to buy or sell anything that's worth more than say, $50. And if I do buy something, I use my credit card just to be sure. And, in the few times I've used auctions, I did get burned once, and it took me months to get my credit card refunded, which happened just before I lodged a protest with my credit card company. No matter how many systems are implemented, I just think that the idea of buying and selling to unknown individuals that could be anywhere and anybody is an inherently bad idea. I'd much rather pay a bit extra to buy from a known vendor than pay money to an individual. People who use things like eBay heavily do so at their own risk.
Any escrow worth its salt will accept the buyer's payment via credit card. Why is this safer? Because if you don't get the goods, you can call the credit card company for a charge-back. If the escrow is just a scam, they'll be charged-back so many times that Visa and Mastercard will stop working with them, rendering the site useless. Wiring to a bank account, especially an overseas bank account, opens you up to this kind of trouble. If the scammer is completely outside of the USA, there is nothing American law enforcement can do, and third-world countries usually have enough problems that enforcing laws about "don't scam Americans" are not high on their list.
check out this list of naughty, naughty people.
Paypal sucks too. Don't use them. They aren't secure at all...I almost got robbed, but luckily I sleuthed it in time, and contacted the seller and she refunded my money.
One way to shut these things down is to get the guys doing the scamming.
Okay, now that I've done the "Mr. Obvious Man" imiatation, let me pontificate a bit.
It's one thing to try and track down the web site author, which can be tough at best, but when you've got a real point of contact who's insisting on USING the fake web site, and it's a fairly sure bet he's part of the scam, you've got a much simpler target. Ebay certainly would go after this guy, and the French authorities may also very well be interested in nailing him.
Unlike the web site creators, it may actually be fairly easy for Ebay to get hold of this guy, when they can prove criminal intent and have good reason to release the details to authorities. At the least, they can use YOUR help to set up a sting - supply you with the funds, follow thru the transaction, observe the scam unfold, and then go get the guy where he lives.
--Brandon / Split Infinity Music
Any decently large business worth its beans should be able to accept credit-card payments. Hell, if the local coffee shop can take VISA, I'm pretty sure that a large well-founded escrow service can. If they're only accepting wires or other hard-to-trace methods, people should really clue in that they're probably going to get "escrewed."
I've only lost money once on ebay, and that was because I tried to get the package shipped without value, and thus couldn't collect insurance when the postman stole it (the seller has a strong rep, so I'm fairly sure it's the postman as I've heard of this happening before). I've had other times when companies tried to hose me, one sent me the wrong part and I rangled with them for refund for 3 months, before getting smart and calling Visa (Visa had a little talk with them, my refund came very quickly after without needing chargeback).
Visa doesn't like fraudsters, because it hurts their reputation as a safe method of transaction. Every so often, they go out like sharpened stakes and impale a few scammers to set an example. If you're lucky, you can catch them when they're looking for somebody to lynch.
If I can spend 10,000 or 20,000 for some crap at a Net auction, I can buy a plane tix to go pick it up in person.
Online auctions are wonderful! I've also sold perhaps $5,000 of old useless junk that I didn't need. But obviously, it wasn't junk to the buyers-- I freed space in my apartment and got cash, they got used items that they didn't want to pay new prices for. Win-win!
Have I ever been scammed? Twice. First time I tried to buy Mac OS X 10.1 on eBay and instead of the nice retail box in the picture, I got CD-R discs. I was out $100.00. I disputed with VISA and they credited my account. The second time I lost $600.00 trying to buy a digital camera. I got nothing and it seems that many were scammed (I was contacted by the FBI! The seller was somewhere in Tennessee and they had scammed many others, apparently.)
Am I mad that I've been scammed twice? Perhaps. But compared to buying retail where I live, I'm still way ahead. And the stuff I've been able to buy is much cooler. And when you also account for used items I've been able to turn into cash that would otherwise simply have been given away or worse thrown into a landfill or incinerator, I'm really not behind by any stretch of the imagination. I'm living much better than I could afford to live if eBay didn't exist.
The key on sites like eBay is to scrutinize the seller's feedback carefully. If you are unsure, simply e-mail them and ask if you can give them a call and talk about it. If you still feel uneasy, don't buy!
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
http://www.msnbc.com/news/818257.asp?0cb=-11911095 7
0 95 7
http://www.msnbc.com/news/809148.asp?0cb=-21911
There are just plenty of indications that eBay is NOT fundamentally ethical. They apparently do not vigorously and rigorously prosecutw all evidence, and seem willing to accept a high a rate of fraud as think will not scare off the bulk of the buyers. It seems that they just look at it as a marketing perception problem to be minimally managed.
The lesson, stay out of the popular goods, avoid the power sellers, make only modest purchases you can afford to lose, and generally beware.
There are lots of great people both buying and selling on eBay; this approach should keep you working with them.
I just find it humorous that people would not trust a buyer/seller on eBay because they don't know them - but they will trust an escrow "company" they have never used before just because they have a website.
Of course there is still the problem of companies that act legitimate for a while and then screw all their customers at once. I seem to recall that happened with a laptop seller recently.
Where is the link to the article?
How do I know that you aren't just making this all up?
Most of these fake "escrow" sites seem to have some connection to E-Gold. E-gold itself is suspicious; they insist that their users release them from liability, and they seem to be incorporated in the Bahamas. Real financial services do not ask their customers to sign indemnification agreements or to relieve them from liability. If you see an indemnification clause in any financial service agreement, do not agree . Go elsewhere.
I was scammed out of $150 on eBay for a software package. What I was sent was the demo version and a time-bombed demo unlock code. And the seller had had good feedback.
Shortly there after, the seller disappeared, and then EBAY cancelled the account, indicating that EBAY knew these guys were frauds. But did eBay make it easy for victims to reclaim funds? Not on your life.
It's almost impossible to even find the eBay safe harbor forms. If you can find them, there is all sorts of "real" not "e" paperwork to fill out. I sent it all using registered mail to their address in Utah. According to their own rules, they were to respond in 90 days (or something like that).
They finally responded in more like six months. Only after countless emails on my part. You can't call ebay -- they make that impossible.
So though eBay knew these guys were frauds, they made it very difficult for me to file a claim, and then they took six months, not three months to return my money.
It's this kind of crap from eBay and Paypal that has me wishing state/federal regulation on them.
There goes my "unverifed", address-on-file, PayPal account. Fucking socialists and communists just pissing me off today. I want the FBI to stop by my house to ask why I have suspiciously opened a "unverified" paypal bank account and have not "verified" it. That way I can say "fuck your banking system" because PayPal opens one automatically and then these stupid half-wit computer users on eBay send me fucky-funny-money using PayPal and I am not administrativly allowed to stop the PayPal payment and now I'm stuck "unverified" with $1000.00 in that god-damned mis-leading exceedingly duress PayPal bank account.
I will bomb those mother fucking sons and bitches of whores because they have stolen from me. I will show no mercy on them as they show no mercy on me. And I will not respect their laws because they did not respect my laws. You will be blown to smitherines! I kid you not, you read it here first. PayPal's San Francisco office will be destroyed on April 1, 2003, so I recommend you to think it as the funniest prank ever for me to blow them up before they can send me an April fools fucking unsolicited newsletter. Yes, the militia of the old-guard, will pound them into the dirt.
No joke, you better track me down before I accomplish the deed. I'll make sure they have no American presence while I'm still arround. I am the PayPal PayBack Bomber. I will level your offices.
Sleep lightly, until April 1, 2003. After that, you will not have a job and enjoy what freedom remains because now or never, they take your freedom away with contracts, meritime contracts of admiralty jurisdiction, and state of war. Goodbye, PayPal. This is and was my formal notice. I know you receive this one, and I know you delete the polite eMail I've sent you before this. This is what happens when the checks and balance system is broken by the people not willing to enforce it. It's bank-bombing time!
Example: If a seller has less than 35 SELLING feedback, you set eBay to filter his auctions out. If a buyer has less than 23 BUYER feedbacks, same deal.
Granted, this has nothing to do with escrow (Which I will never use), but certainly could allow you to tailor eBay to your personal comfort level.
Or, If you have a big ticket item to sell and don't have a huge amount of auctions under your belt, contact a seller who has 1000+ positive feedback and sell the item through them. They get a cut, you get your dough, the buyer feels safer bidding higher. Everybody wins! What a Coun-try! I'll be doing that with my Moog 1p soon.
I believe I narrowly avoided this scam a few months ago. While looking for a used BMW M5, I found a deal which seemed 'to good to be true©'. The price was fifteen grand below market value, and the guy selling it was supposedly somewhere in N.Y. After a few weeks of e-mail, and my trying in vain to get the guy to call me in person, I called him out on his ploy...something to the effect of "I cannot go forward without speaking to you in person. Escrow or not. Needless to say I never heard from the guy again, and subsequently the car was no longer listed on cars.com
What I couldn't figure out while I was in the middle of it, was how the scam worked. While he didn't 'lead' me to an escrow service, I only had my own suspicions regarding how escrow itself worked. If the money wasn't transferred til I recieved the car and okay'd it, it didn't make sense how the guy could profit...However, with the disclosure of scam sites, it is more clear. It is a crap shoot on his end. He hopes that I do not research my escrow options and use a service that he can game.
BTW, I looked into a number of escrow sites -- e-gold services and such, talk about shady characters...I think I will stick to my local classifieds for anything over a couple of hundred bucks.
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/son.of.spam/
Another version of this scam which got posted to the escrow boards on eBay scams the seller. It goes like this:
When the escrow site gets the buyers payment, they send an email to the seller saying it is okay to ship. However, we all know how easy it is to fake an email. One buyer faked an email that looked like it came from escrow.com and the seller shipped the item (out of the country). Good bye!
Never, ever, ever trust an email from eBay or escrow.com. They will be the first to tell you this. Both have links on most of their pages alerting you to this. Login into the site manually and confirm status before continuing the transaction.
This message is mostly for the net-clueless and not the typical slashdot reader.
So they'll have to ask it "are you a powerful rocket?"
They'll be able to shoot it if it replies "Oh, I'm just a warhead with a little push in the right direction. I just try to get the bomb near its target. I'm just doing my job."
Non Sequitur \Non seq"ui*tur\ [L., it does not follow]
n 1: a reply that has no relevance to what preceded it
a href="http://agh3.com//modules.php?op=modload
This post really belongs under some of the other top level posts regarding credit cards, but I wanted it at the top level to get more attention to an issue I think many people are not aware of.
Not all credit card purchases are safe. When a eBay seller asks for _only_ Western Union wire transfer or C2IT, you should be wary. Both of these transactions are billed to your credit card as cash advances and are not subject to credit card fraud protection charge back. YMMV - read your terms and conditions for your credit card.
I maintain a page of scam auction red flags here:
Scam Auction Red Flags
Hell with buying shit on eBay...just
sell stuff, it's safer.
If you're willing to frighten, cheat, brutalize and hurt your fellow human beings, you can get a lot of goods and services you would otherwise have to pay for or spend a lot of effort to obtain legitimately. Need $50? Go rob a convenience store, the $6/hour clerk won't put up much of a fight. Want a Beemer? Car-jack some rich guy at a stop light. Shoot him in the head if he resists. Been a dry year in the bedroom? Rape a woman jogging in the park. It's as simple as that. If you can't bring yourself to do these things, congratulations, you may very well be a well-adjusted human being, regardless of how much "Cowboy Bebop" you watch :-)
Freedom: "I won't!"
Do you think it's okay to take advantage of the less intelligent, or are you just saying that people deserve to suffer the consequences of their actions?
Why condem the poeple who were scammed? Shouldn't we be thinking about ways to educate people, or help them get their money back? Being too trusting isn't a crime that should cost someone $30,000.
Of course, if you believe in a world where it is moral for the more intelligent or powerful to take advantage of those less so, anything that helps the weak or incompetent is surely detrimental to the gene pool.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
Try a query regarding escrow, and check the right hand side of the page. If they have not removed it yet, you should see the sponsored link.
I wan't to cry reading this. I am an Indonesian citizen, and I am not proud of what has done by many thieves here. But I still wish you believe that there are many honest people here in Indonesia which hate those robbers, but can't push government yet to create firmer law to lessen those incidents. But we have been trying to do so.
is too busy figuring out how to best turn their operation towards the pursuit of Total Information Awareness to be bothered with anything like legitimate investigation.
You know, I would post this with my user account, but I don't want to direct trouble my way.
However, we're aware that there are some good Indonesians. However, Muslim fundamentalists (about 10% of all Muslims) are trying to exterminate all other people of the book, and they need money to do that.
Thus Indonesian auction scams, Pakistani kidnappings, Sudanese kidnappings, and Nigerian "Mobutu" scams.
It's pretty obvious that they are full of iniquity, and revel in it as well -- but that isn't for me to avenge. Let God do rebuke them.