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If you can answer “YES” to any of
the following questions, you could be involved in a FRAUD or about
to be SCAMMED!!!
Ø
Is
the CHECK from an item you sold on the Internet, such as a car,
boat, jewelry, etc?
Ø
Is
the amount of the CHECK more than the item’s selling price?
Ø
Did
you receive the CHECK via an overnight delivery service?
Ø
Is
the CHECK connected to communicating with someone by email?
Ø
Is
the CHECK drawn on a business or individual account that is
different from the person buying your item or product?
Ø
Have
you been informed that you were the winner of a LOTTERY, such as
Canadian, Australian, El Gordo, or El Mundo, that you did not enter?
Ø
Have
you been instructed to either “WIRE”, “SEND” OR “SHIP”
MONEY, as soon as possible, to a large U.S. city or to another
country, such as Canada, England, or Nigeria?
Ø
Have
you been asked to PAY money to receive a deposit from another
country such as Canada, England, or Nigeria?
Ø
Are
you receiving PAY or a COMMISSION for facilitating money transfers
through your account?
Ø
Did
you respond to an email requesting you to CONFIRM, UPDATE, OR
PROVIDE your account information?
TELL A
BANK OFFICER IMMEDIATELY!
FTC
FACTS for
Consumers
1-877-FTC-HELP
ftc.gov
FEDERAL
TRADE
COMMISSION
Giving
the Bounce to Counterfeit Check Scams
It’s
your lucky day! You just won a foreign lottery! The letter says so.
And the cashier’s check to cover the taxes and fees is included.
All you have to do to get your winnings is deposit the check and
wire the money to the sender to pay the taxes and fees. You’re
guaranteed that when they get your payment, you’ll get your prize.
There’s
just one catch: this is a scam.
The
check is no good, even though it appears to be a legitimate
cashier’s check. The lottery angle is a trick to get you to wire
money to someone you don’t know. If you were to deposit the check
and wire the money, your bank would soon learn that the check was a
fake. And you’re out the money because the money you wired can’t
be retrieved, and you’re responsible for the checks you deposit
— even though you don’t know they’re fake.
This
is just one example of a counterfeit check scam that could leave you
scratching your head. The Federal Trade Commission, the nation’s
consumer protection agency, wants you to know that counterfeit check
scams are on the rise. Some fake checks look so real that bank
tellers are reporting being fooled. The scammers use high quality
printers and scanners to make the checks look real. Some of the
checks contain authentic-looking watermarks. These counterfeit
checks are printed with the names and addresses of legitimate
financial institutions. And even though the bank and account and
routing numbers listed on a counterfeit check may be real, the check
still can be a fake.
These
fakes come in many forms, from cashier’s checks and money orders
to corporate and personal checks. Could you be a victim? Not if you
know how to recognize and report them.
Fake
Checks: Variations on a Scheme
Counterfeit
or fake checks are being used in a growing number of fraudulent
schemes, including foreign lottery scams (as described above), check
overpayment scams, Internet auction scams, and secret shopper scams.
Check
overpayment scams target
consumers selling cars or other valuable items through classified
ads or online auction sites. Unsuspecting sellers get stuck when
scammers pass off bogus cashier’s checks, corporate checks, or
personal checks. Here’s how it happens:
A
scam artist replies to a classified ad or auction posting, offers to
pay for the item with a check, and then comes up with a reason for
writing the check for more than the purchase price. The scammer asks
the seller to wire back the difference after depositing the check.
The seller does it, and later, when the scammer’s check bounces,
the seller is left liable for the entire amount.
In
secret shopper scams, the consumer, hired to be a
secret shopper, is asked to evaluate the effectiveness of a money
transfer service. The consumer is given a check, told to deposit it
in their bank account, and withdraw the amount in cash. Then, the
consumer is told to take the cash to the money transfer service
specified, and typically, send the transfer to a person in a
Canadian city. Then, the consumer is supposed to evaluate their
experience — but no one collects the evaluation. The secret
shopper scenario is just a scam to get the consumer’s money.
Con
artists who use these schemes can easily avoid detection. When funds
are sent through wire transfer services, the recipients can pick up
the money at other locations within the same country; it is nearly
impossible for the sender to identify or locate the recipient.
You
and Your Bank — Who is Responsible for What?
Under
federal law, banks must make funds available to you from U.S.
Treasury checks, official bank checks (cashier’s checks, certified
checks, and teller’s checks), and checks paid by government
agencies at the opening of business the day after you deposit the
check. For other checks, banks must similarly make the first $100
available the day after you deposit the check. Remaining funds must
be made available on the second day after the deposit if payable by
a local bank, and within five days if drawn on distant banks.
However,
just because funds are available on a check you’ve deposited
doesn’t mean the check is good. It’s best not to rely on money
from any type of check (cashier, business or personal
check, or money order) unless you know and trust the person you’re
dealing with or, better yet — until the bank confirms that the
check has cleared. Forgeries can take weeks to be discovered and
untangled. The bottom line is that until the bank confirms that the
funds from the check have been deposited into your account, you are
responsible for any funds you withdraw against that check.
Facts
for Consumers
Protecting
Yourself
Here’s
how to avoid a counterfeit check scam:
•
Throw away any offer that asks you to pay for a prize or a gift. If
it’s free or a gift, you shouldn’t have to pay for it. Free is
free.
•
Resist the urge to enter foreign lotteries. It’s illegal to play a
foreign lottery through the mail or the telephone, and most foreign
lottery solicitations are phony.
•
Know who you’re dealing with, and never wire money to strangers.
•
If you’re selling something, don’t accept a check for more than
the selling price, no matter how tempting the offer or how
convincing the story. Ask the buyer to write the check for the
correct amount. If the buyer refuses to send the correct amount,
return the check. Don’t send the merchandise.
•
As a seller, you can suggest an alternative way for the buyer to
pay, like an escrow service or online payment service. There may be
a charge for an escrow service. If the buyer insists on using a
particular escrow or online payment service you’ve never heard of,
check it out. Visit its website, and read its terms of agreement and
privacy policy. Call the customer service line. If there isn’t one
— or if you call and can’t get answers about the service’s
reliability — don’t use the service. To learn more about escrow
services and online payment systems, visit ftc.gov/onlineshopping.
•
If you accept payment by check, ask for a check drawn on a local
bank, or a bank with a local branch. That way, you can make a
personal visit to make sure the check is valid. If that’s not
possible, call the bank where the check was purchased, and ask if it
is valid. Get the bank’s phone number from directory assistance or
an Internet site that you know and trust, not from the check or from
the person who gave you the check.
•
If the buyer insists that you wire back funds, end the transaction
immediately. Legitimate buyers don’t pressure you to send money by
wire transfer services. In addition, you have little recourse if
there’s a problem with a wire transaction.
•
Resist any pressure to “act now.” If the buyer’s offer is good
now, it should be good after the check clears.
If
You Think You’re a Victim
If
you think you’ve been targeted by a counterfeit check scam, report
it to the following agencies:
•
The Federal Trade Commission
Visit
ftc.gov or 1-877-FTC-HELP
(1-877-382-4357).
•
The U.S. Postal Inspection Service
Visit
www.usps.gov/websites/depart/inspect or
call
your local post office. The number is in the
Blue
Pages of your local telephone directory.
•
Your state or local consumer
protection
agencies
Visit
www.naag.org for a list of state Attorneys
General,
or check the Blue Pages of your local
telephone
directory for appropriate phone
numbers.
For
More Information
The
FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and
unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide
information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a
complaint or to get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov
or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY:
1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity
theft, and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a
secure online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law
enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
Facts
for Consumers
1-877-FTC-HELP
ftc.gov
Federal
Trade Commission
Bureau
of Consumer Protection Division of Consumer and Business Education
January
2007
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