New Nigerian scam
suckers online sellers By Peter
Davidson Bankrate.com
Thanks to the power of the Internet, you can post
a classified ad in cyberspace and reach a worldwide audience. But
if you're selling a pricey item, such as a car, boat or a piano,
beware: Con men posing as buyers are reading online ads too, and
have they got a deal for you!
"If you're selling online, be extremely skeptical
of any e-mail offers that come from abroad offering to pay by cashier's
check -- it's almost certainly a scam," warns Iowa Attorney
General Tom Miller.
The scam is the latest spinoff of the Nigerian letter
scam, which offers gullible consumers the opportunity to share in
a fortune if they provide their bank account information. The offers
come in e-mails, which are sent from Internet cafes in Nigeria and
other West African countries.
Law enforcement officials say the new scheme has bilked
thousands of unsuspecting sellers out of millions of dollars. No
one knows for certain how much money has been stolen, or how many
have been scammed, but officials say only the tip of the iceberg
has been reported to authorities.
What's more, there's virtually no chance victims will
ever be able to recover any of their money. "That's because
we have no authority outside the United States," says Tom Mazur,
spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service, the law enforcement agency
that's leading the investigation of the scam and trying to warn
unsuspecting consumers about it.
"We're seeing victims all across America, but
about all we can do is educate the public and state and local law
enforcement agencies."
Here's how the scam works: A consumer selling an expensive
item via the Internet gets an e-mail from a buyer overseas -- often
from Africa -- who says he wants to purchase the item, and will
pay for it with a cashier's check from a U.S. bank.
Next, the buyer informs the seller that the cashier's
check will come from a third party and will be for an amount greater
than the selling price of the item because someone in the U.S. owes
him money from a previous deal that wasn't finalized. The buyer
tells the seller to wire the difference to him in Africa after the
check clears.
A few days later the cashier's check arrives. The
seller deposits the check in his own account. Thinking that the
check is good because it's been accepted for deposit by his bank,
and the funds have been released, the unsuspecting seller wires
the difference to the con man in Africa. But in a week or two the
seller learns he's been scammed when his bank informs him that the
check was phony and wants him to pay back all the money it paid
out on the bogus check.
That's what happened to Shawn and Jeff Mosch of Minneapolis,
Minn., when they advertised their 1961 Buick Special for sale on
a popular classified Web site for $1,600.
They received inquiries from across the country and
from South America, but none worked out. Then they received an e-mail
from a man in Nigeria.
"He claimed he was a car dealer in Lagos,"
remembers Shawn. "He said that he wanted to buy the car for
$1,600, and that someone in the U.S. who owed him $7,200 would send
us a cashier's check for $8,800. We should deduct our $1,600 and
wire the remaining balance of $7,200 to him in Africa through Western
Union."
When a Bank of America cashier's check arrived in
the mail from Pennsylvania, Shawn took it to her bank where a teller
informed her funds would be available in 24 hours.
"I asked him, 'Are you sure?' I wanted to be
absolutely certain that it was good and wouldn't come back to bite
me in the butt," she says.
The teller laughed and said, 'Tomorrow afternoon,
ma'am. No problem.'"
The Mosches waited 48 hours before withdrawing $7,200
and sending it to their "buyer" in Nigeria. One week later
their bank called to tell them that the check was bogus -- and $7,200
had been deducted from their savings account.
"The checks are superb facsimiles, counterfeit
but so authentic that they fool bank personnel who study them,"
says Tom Miller, the Iowa attorney general. "People think the
cashier's check must be good when the bank gives them the money."
But Susan Grant of the National Fraud Information
Center notes: "Just because the money is available for you
to use doesn't mean the check is good."
That's because when a cashier's check is deposited,
the bank, as a courtesy to its customer, may make the funds available
in as little as two days even though it can take as long as two
weeks until the check's authenticity is verified by the bank that
it was drawn on. And if the check is bad, it's the consumer who
will have to make good.
Nancy and Ken Ferry of Nashua, N.H., were luckier
than the Mosches when they advertised their 2004 Dutchman trailer
on the Internet for $21,000.
"Almost immediately we received an e-mail from
someone who called himself Markus Johnson," Nancy recalled.
"He said he lived in Finland, and since he was in another country
an associate in the U.S. would handle the transaction for him."
The next day, the Ferrys received an e-mail from the
associate, Woodman Lambert. He asked them to e-mail photos of the
trailer. Following that exchange, Lambert agreed to purchase the
trailer for the asking price, but there was a catch: He was sending
a cashier's check for $26,500.
He explained that Markus Jackson had drawn the check
before leaving on a business trip. He instructed them to deduct
the $21,000 and wire the balance of $5,500 to him. He even gave
them permission to deduct the wire transfer fees.
Sure enough, the next day a Bank of America cashier's
check for $26,500 arrived bearing a return address in Maryland.
But on the very morning it came, Nancy read a magazine article that
warned about con men preying on unsuspecting consumers from Internet
cafes in Nigeria.
Instead of depositing the check, the Ferrys called
the Bank of America. When they learned that the check was phony,
they filed a complaint with the FBI and sent an e-mail to Markus,
the crook who tried to scam them.
"I told him we were on to him, and that he was
nothing but a lowdown con man."
Other online sellers have been
less fortunate.
- Ed Parker, a California teen selling a 1964 Volkswagen
Beetle on the Internet, lost $3,600 to Nigerian scammers.
- George and Dawn Brindly of Penn Valley, Calif.,
offered their 1999 Chevy Astro van for sale on the Internet. They
lost $4,340.
- Jeremy Sjoblom of Yorktown Heights, Va., was scammed
for $5,800 when he tried to sell his 2001 Volkswagen GTI online.
"It's really difficult to tell these checks are
fake," says Gene Seitz, of the FDIC's special activity section.
He advises anyone who receives a cashier's check as
payment to do what the Ferrys did: Call the issuing bank to make
certain that it really authorized it.
And U.S. Secret Service agent John Joyce, based in
Tampa, Fla., said there are two warning signs that should get the
attention of potential victims.
"One, when you are dealing with someone from
Nigeria, bells should be going off," he said. "The majority
of these crimes come from Nigeria.
"The second thing is that the person is willing
to pay more than what you are asking for. That's abnormal."
Peter Davidson is a freelance
writer based in Florida.
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