Been Robbed Recently? Check Ebay
fistfullast33l writes "A man from Great Neck, Long Island has been arrested on charges of stealing electronic equipment and selling it on Ebay. The police were tipped off when one of his alleged victims was searching for a replacement GPS device and found a perfect match on eBay — almost too perfect. A quick check of the serial number (note to cyber-criminals: don't post those) showed that it was the exact device that had been stolen." From the article: "Police and prosecutors were hesitant to provide details of how they determined all the devices had been stolen, but at least two of the laptops were stamped 'Property of St. John's University.' Detective Ray Cote noted that the GPS devices specifically had the addresses of the legitimate owners programmed in and police were now contacting those victims to eventually return the items."
Just a minute, sir. I'm almost done downloading this pr0n.
A man from Great Neck, Long Island has been arrested on charges of stealing electronic equipment and selling it on Ebay.
A++++ WOULD DEFINITELY STEAL FROM AGAIN
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
Ive been wondering, what will happen to the people who bought from him? Will they be required to return what they bought to the original owners? Will they be tracked down by the police for recieving stolen goods?
Would you rather be able to 'buy back' a hard-to-find stolen part from eBay, or have to either source this part from a supplier (more expensively) or abandon the device altogether?
Virtual Betting on Facebook for non-geeks.
On his most recent sale the GPS unit has an anti-theft feature. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item =320065453054
Please do post serial numbers. Please also post name/address of previous owner so we can verify that the item is in a good state of repair. Please also get a sworn statement from a police officer that the facts have been verified and are correct.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Hmmm...Aiding and abetting are we? :-)
What?
You'd have to be some kind of moron to actually leave behind this type of marker before selling it. I mean, it's a great idea to check your local auction site and all that, but most thieves aren't going to be moronic enough to leave behind identifying marks. Although I can just imagine the Q&A...
Q: What is the serial number on this device?
A: 17774677883
Q: Would it be possible to view before buying?
A:
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
Don't make any more difficult to get our shit back...
What?
I've always said that the prisons are full of stupid criminals. And no, I am not counting those who are wrongfully convicted or getting unfairly prosicuted. Only the ones who did a crime and then did something that made it easy to catch them, like putting stuff up on eBay, looking right at the camera, or sending a letter to the FBI taunting them about how they will never catch you, only to have them pull DNA from the back of the stamp linking you to more crimes you didn't mention and giving them a starting point to search thanks to the postmark.
Well, there's another option; you notify the police, and then go through with the sale, in hopes of getting some information that would let the authorities catch the crook. In the worst case, you've bought back your part, and in the best case you'll get your part, plus restitution, plus you'll have sweet, sweet revenge.
A friend of mine got his cellphone and wallet stolen when his car was burglarized, and by monitoring the numbers that the thief called from it, and then calling up the various numbers and pretending to be different people (which is an amusing social engineering story in itself), got the name and home phone number of the criminal. The police, who weren't very much help otherwise, went out and picked the guy up (he was apparently well known to them). My friend got his phone back, plus restitution for the money in his wallet. If he had just waited for the police to do something, he would have been out a phone and a substantial amount of cash.
Sometimes you just need to do some detective work yourself.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
This is one of those rare situations where the general stupidity of human beings is reassuring.
...here in Ontario. A person [girl I think] had a snowboard stolen from the hill. Went on ebay to find a replacement and found her own, just like the GPS story.
is how EBay should be known. Police in Canada are aware of this happening as well. A guy I work with found most of the stuff that was stolen when his house was broken into on EBay. He actually purchased a couple of items to get the sellers details, and advised the police. The police didn't actually even arrest the guy right away, but rather watched him for a few days and caught him red-handed breaking into another place.
So basically, in addition to checking pawn shops yourself after a break-in, check EBay (assuming your only computer wasn't stolen).
To find out people sell stolen things on ebay! *gasp*
I recently bid on an item that made me wonder.
It was only after I bid that I noticed the "No pick-up, postage only" clause in the description. It made me wonder why a seller that was apparently less than 10 km away wasn't prepared to let me know what they look like or where they are, yet they wanted my address.
Then I realised the perfect scam:
1. Sell an item on ebay (possibly stolen).2. Sell the item again, insisting on postage.
3. Hand deliver it, collect the $30 and getting a great chance to scope the house for a future break in.
4. Steal the item from the buyer.
5. goto 1
Maybe I'm a little paranoid, but I was really happy when I lost the bid...
It's interesting to note how easy an anonymous place for selling goods makes criminal activity and refreshing to hear of some crooks being cought out.
I don't therefore I'm not.
EBay ad leads police to stolen snowboard
134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
When my house was robbed, I found my $2,000 LCD monitor on ebay complete with picture of serial number on the back which matched (except for one number slightly too fuzzy to verify a match). This was the week after the robbery. When I called the detective assigned to my case, he did nothing with the information. He said finding my monitor in the hands of a fence would do nothing to catch the people who robbed me. Yeah, but investigating the case might have helped... I learned from this experience that the insurance industry subsidizes the majority of property crime in this country because we're certainly not funding the police well enough to do much about it.
I guess everything is going to make the news somewhere, at some point, but is it news when stolen items show up on a gigantic, nationwide used goods marketplace?
Anywhere an outlet for used products exists, it is going to have some percentage of stolen goods enter it. Take the percentage of stolen goods that are sold at pawn shops or yard sales and compare it to the percentage of stolen goods sold on eBay. I'd lay odds on them being similar.
My brother worked for a large electronic company in Australia. He was the one in charge of distributing laptops and computers to the rest of the company. After the annual review they found they were down a few laptops. As these laptops had never gone out to the staff it was clear that they had either not been delivered originally, were taken from the store room or behind some boxes somewhere gathering dust. The store room staff searched high and low for them for about a day with no luck. As they were packing up to go home one of them said they should check ebay as a joke.
Sure enough the missing laptops were there, and the sellers previous sales showed a number of other laptops that were standard builds for the company.
The police were quite pleased to have an open and shut case given to them.
A quick check of the serial number (note to cyber-criminals: don't post those) showed that it was the exact device that had been stolen."
/. is full of criminals???
Because
My P-P-P-Powerbook was just stolen and I found the thief reselling it on ebay! Call the cops!
My Aged Mum, who was then 80 years of age, lived in an apartment residence for the elderly. Two years ago (on Christmas Eve, no less) she was the victim of a ruthless home invasion. The thief had worked very hard to gain the trust of the elderly residents, and on the night she struck (yep, it was a woman), my mother admitted her to the apartment.
Mom's phone wires were cut her call bell was de-commissioned, and she was savagely beaten--actually unimaginably beaten, and left for dead on the floor in her living room. One of the items taken was an antique doll, quite distinctive and large, and also very valuable. It dated back to approximately the 1820's and had been handed down through the generations from mother to daughter for all that time.
Aged Mum survived, though with traumatic brain injuries that left her mental capacities greatly diminished. She grieved over that doll; perhaps it was irrational, but I grieved, too. While the police worked on finding the perpetrator, I began to haunt eBay. Each morning as I started work, and each night before I went to bed, I ran search after search, using every term I could think of. Three weeks after the crime, I hit paydirt; the doll was there. Because I had been so connected to it over my lifetime, I was able to supply an exhaustive description. (Unaccountably we had no photograph.) The police contacted eBay, the auction was stopped, they got a warrant, and next morning they served it on the seller.
As it turns out, he was legitimate; he had purchased the doll at a well known local flea market the week before. He had been on eBay for several years, selling vintage stuff and assorted items he found at local sales. He provided as much information as he could, and the doll was returned to us within 24 hours of my first locating it at eBay. The doll's porcelain head was undamaged, but her arms (which are kidskin leather) were in bad shape.
Stories like this really don't have good outcomes. In our case we've had to see an intelligent, lively old lady suffer the loss of her intellect in what should be a comfortable old age. The police have not located the criminal after two years, and additional violence has taken place at that facility where my mother lived. Aged Mum is in a much better facility now, and the doll is here with me--and has been photographed and appraised for insurance purposes.
I guess the lessons learned are these: (1) Ebay does cooperate with police, and the police know how to secure their cooperation--probably best to leave the interaction to the cops. (2) I had some kind of underlying certainty, which might have been irrational, that the doll would eventually show up on eBay, one way or the other. I searched diligently and regularly. (3) Document your valuables. (4) It may take a while for your items to turn up, and they may pass through several hands. It all depends on whether the scum who has robbed you is versed in eBay or has to use the traditional fences, flea markets, and crooked pawnbrokers.
"Here's what's happening. You're starting to drive like your Dad..." - Red Green
Unless eBay was being used to launder them...
It's not worth as much after it's been washed.
paintball
Actually, it would be quite beneficial if listing the serial # of items on eBay became a de facto SOP. If legitimate traders started including identifying information, such as serial #s, as a way of verifying that the goods were not stolen, other merchants would be pressured into doing the same. Listings without a serial number would be regarded as suspicious, so people wouldn't get burnt dealing with crooks.
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
Cellular phones that are reported stolen are blocked by the provider from activation except by the original owner, or after clearance by the retailer to whom they were originally shipped. Always get the 11-digit electronic serial number (decimal) of a phone before buying it, and call the provider to verify that it is not stolen.
When phones were stolen from my former employer, they had a value of zero after we called to submit the list of ESN's that the thief got.
FairTax baby!
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
A while back some kids stole a bunch of big flat panel monitors at my school.
They made a few mistakes:
1) Posted the items on EBay with their @uconn.edu addresses
2) Stored the items on campus in a dorm room.
3) Told people about it.
Oops
-b.
IANAL, either, but I was always under the impression that you're never allowed to keep stolen property, full stop. The fact that you made (what you thought was) a legitimate purchase doesn't change the fact that the seller did not have the right to sell the item in question.
For example, there have been a couple cases of people being conned into "buying" public property (most famously the Brooklyn Bridge.) Yes, these people were EXTREMELY gullible, so it probably wouldn't pass your "reasonable expectation" test, but let's take a step back for a moment and imagine a scenario where the person was not extraordinarily gullible, but rather was duped through nigh-superhuman effort on the part of the con artist. Let's say that the fraudster knew that the target would have a keen interested in buying the Brooklyn Bridge, if it was ever actually for sale, so he cooked up a scheme involving buying off the subject's friends and acquaintances, slipping him fake newspapers, hiring actors to play all the appropriate officials, figured out a halfway plausible reason for the sale (they're building a replacement, perhaps) etc. and in the end, he actually succeeds in convincing his target that the Brooklyn Bridge was, indeed, for sale, and the target "buys" it from the criminal. Does that now mean that the target legally owns the Brooklyn Bridge? Of course, the only sane answer is a resounding "NO!" The government did not agree to sell him anything.
I believe that the "reasonable expectation" concept you speak of pertains more to criminal culpability--the buyer be held criminally responsible, for example, if he buys the Mona Lisa (a few months after it was stolen) because it's not reasonable for him to claim that he didn't know it was stolen.
I'm not 100% sure on this, but it just makes sense--if ownership of the stolen property was actually legally transfered to the buyer, it would be utter chaos. You could steal the hope diamond, trade it to your friend for a candy bar (technically, this is a valid transaction) telling him it's worthless glass, and as long as you could prove that your friend really did think it was fake, it would become his legal property and the original owners would be SOL. Somehow, I really doubt that it works that way...
Don't be too harsh on them immediately. Their account could have well been hacked either through phishing or a dishonest employee. It happens all the time, unfortunately.
-b.
The wife's PC was stolen a few days ago - I'm waiting for the asshat to plug it into the internet. Come-on buddy, plug it in, plug it in.
Grumble, grumble...
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
Did this article surprise anyone? Ebay has become the biggest and easist way to fence stolen goods and get full market value. As long as they are not not easily identifiable, it is perfect.
ah the good old days, when I used to live next door to a 10 acre Fencing operation..er...Flea Market.
I like microcars
I think this AC schlep thought he was being funny!
I laughed.
F tha douche anyway!
Bring back Sirius Punk!
Had they simply closed their eBay account, I wouldn't have been so worried. It was the fact they first deleted all their listings, which has the effect of removing all easy-to-see proof I ever had a transaction to begin with. This was an extra step on their part. It's troubling to have eBay's website act like it has never heard of the item number I am looking for and refuse to give me contact info for the member (because it does not recognize my item number).
I should mention I have tried contacting them already. The email receipt from Paypal has an email address for them on their domain, their actual PayPal account record also has a different email address on the same domain. I sent emails to both addresses over the last week. They were just short little "Hey there! I noticed you closed your eBay account..." type things. I just wanted a note back that they hadn't forgotten about me and if they wanted to drop the transaction. If I caught them just before they shut down their eBay operations I can understand, I just want my money back if that's the case.
When I didn't get any response by the end of the week, I tried to call the company's customer service 800 number on their regular website. It might have been after hours for them, I got an answering system that could not accept any new messages at the time. Then I noticed the PayPal info had a separate long-distance number for them. I got an answering machine for the business, which I left a message giving the eBay item number, day I paid them and amount, ect and my number to call me back. I have had no response to any of these attempts to contact them.
Doesn't sound like the behavior of a company that was the hapless victim of eBay hacking to me.
Back in high school, we had a very cool digital animation class. It was specially commissioned, and ten Mac G5s were ordered just for that classroom.
Some time later, they were all stolen. The people who had set up the program were understandably pissed- what kind of scumbag steals equipment from a public school FFS? Well, the teacher was smart enough to check ebay, and sure enough, there they were. The thief was a student... not a minor, either. Turns out he had stolen other computers from the school previously, also. Long story short, he got pwned... no college will ever take the poor bastard now, hahaha.
One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces.
On top of all those benefits, I hear it's really easy to get laid! Especially if you're skinny and white...
But seriously, while all those things may be "free" you pay the rather significant price non-monetary price of not being free yourself.
A couple of semi-obvious tips on spotting a stolen computer: 1. very careless packaging; 2. personal data intact.
In both cases we contacted police. In one case, apparently little was done by police, despite serial number check immediately revealing that the machine had been recently stolen from a school. In the 2nd case, the stolen laptop - full of personal data, mostly irreplaceable - was the only lead in solving a major house burglary. Laptop returned to owner, thief arrested, eventually had to pay restitution to ebay purchaser. In the second case, the ebay seller's transaction history looked very suspicious. If you have any suspicions - random tips: comb feedback logs in detail; if machine has personal data, contact previous owner (in our case, they confirmed the robbery and were very grateful); Try to get as much identifying detail from seller as possible in case it must be given to police; Don't meet them in person; Get serial numbers and check with police before concluding the sale; contact police and ask for advice.
you had me at #!
Yeah, a few months back some punk-ass kid stole my dad's surboard out of his yard. My dad called the police, but they just ran him around to a voice mail box.
Fortunately, though, the other kids in the neighborhood knew who did it... they walked me to his house and after speaking with his mother, we got it back. The kid cooperated, too, but I suspect it was only because his mother was there- his story reeked of BS anyway. But, seeing as how I got the board back for my dad, I didn't want to call him on it (or beat his punk ass, for that matter).
One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces.
If it wasn't for theese brave risk-takers we'd rarely get the opportunity to get theese things for soo cheap, even the richest crackheads run out of stuff eventually.
Sure property relocators could charge full price like everyone else, but out of the kindness of their hearts have decided to give the hard working citizens a break that nobody else is willing to give.
Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
Not new...
...
taken from the LA Daily Breeze - Nov. 5, 2004
"An alleged plot by two Palos Verdes Peninsula High School students to profit from the theft of $30,000 worth of computers stolen from a classroom was thwarted when a teacher found the equipment for sale on eBay, sheriff's deputies said Thursday.
The break-in at the Rolling Hills Estates campus occurred about 1 a.m. Saturday. Someone jimmied the lock and entered the classroom, taking 10 Macintosh G5 computers."
This has been going on for some time... next time you think you're getting a steal of a price, it may be a real steal.
So is someone is bad you is saying they should get caned ?
... for a Darwin award, some time in the future.
In the early(ish) days of E-Bay (before they bought pay-pal), one of my co-workers and I discussed the possibility of selling our companies office supplies (you know, printer paper, envelopes, pens, staplers, etc..) on e-bay.
As a test of the ease of doing this, we created an e-bay and pay-pal account, and placed a few items. Considering that the company also payed (unwittingly) for the postage - which was also charged to the buyer - this was a real cash cow, which we operated for about four or five transactions. We sold enough to pay for a fine meal in a top quality local restaurant.
It was simply too damned easy, and too tempting to continue, and took a fair bit of self-discipline to stop. I am sure others have and continue to do the same thing though.
so, if I sell somebody the brooklyn bridge, who then proceeds to paint it, that gentleman owns the bridge?
I'm pretty sure you are wrong...
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
About a week after my stereo, amp, sub, and speakers were stolen out of my truck, some guys I knew bought an amp and subs from a guy in a white cargo van just a block away from where my truck had been. Since my insurance covered everything, I decided it'd be less grief for me just to ignore it. But damn, I sure wanted to turn those pricks in.
We can't blame the two art dealers because in the past art was not tracked so well and ownership was transfered with just a handshake. The thief is long dead as is the owner.
I think even in these cases where there is no one alive to blame the current "owner" still looses out and the courts have to straighten it out. These kinds of art cases come up several times a year. The most famos recent cases are with the Getty which was found to be holding art looted from Italy.
In many cases the shop has to periodically report the merchandise and identity of the owner to the police. This can work locally, but eBay is international.
You all DO realize that your digital pictures typically have an embedded serial number of the camera in it, right?
I for one would love it if Flickr or YahooPhotos would offer the ability to search on serial numbers. Then I could recover my digital camera that was stolen... think of the possibilities!
Would at least limit the market for the stupid things. They're obviously worth nothing as parts so the entire unit would be sold to some unsuspecting person.
Yah, Ebay has listing fees, ending fees, and paypal fees. If you were robbed recently, it was probably Ebay.
God spoke to me.
YOu are right - you are NAL. You have no right to keep stolen property, period. Best Buy might work out a deal where they buy the item from the original owner so you can keep it, but if they wanted their stuff back you would have to give it up. If EXPECTATION was a factor in ownership of stolen property you could keep all the counterfiet money you get, and that won't happen. I can't really see the bank saying "Oh this $50 bill looks pretty real - you can keep it."
Expectation is just used in the courts to determine your level of complicity in the illegal transaction, not to determine ownership.