fake check scam

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Nina Meads

Woman arrested in fraud scheme:

Here’s something you don’t see every day. Someone in the US was arrested for being part of the overpayment scam on craigslist.

Police in Charleston, SC arrested 55-year-old Nina Marie Meads. It seems that Meads was allegedly the go between for Nigerians committing the overpayment scam.

For those of you who don’t know how it works is that someone will post something for sale on craigslist then the seller will receive a check for more than the amount they asked for. The ‘buyer’ will say they sent that in error then ask the seller to wire them back the overpayment. After the seller wires back the difference they find out that the check was a fake and the seller is now on the hook for the money.

Police say that Meads was the go between who would get the money from the wiring service before sending it to her overlords in Nigeria.

How does one even get a job being a runner for Nigerian scammers? Do they advertise on craigslist?

The fight isn’t over yet. Help spread the word on craigslist and backpage crime by winning a free CraigsCrimeList T-Shirt.

craigslist crime post #1389
Scams post #195

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Anchorage man facing counterfeiting charges:

33-year-old Bradley Blodgett of Anchorage, Alaska has been charged with making counterfeit checks that are used in the craigslist fake check scam.

Blodgett was allegedly employed by the Nigerians to print out the fake checks and send them to the scam victims.

He’s looking at 25 years. Too bad we can’t get the Nigerians in charge of these scams.

To help educate people on these scams you can win a free CraigsCrimeList T-Shirt.

Craigslist crime post #1281
Scam post #192

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Brighton woman’s Craigslist puppy sale goes awry:

A woman from Brighton, Colorado could no longer care for her puppy so she sold it on craigslist. A woman paid her $150 by check. Not only was the check a fake but the ‘buyer’ turned around and was trying to sell the dog on craigslist.

I love animals and I know how hard it is to give away one of your pets. I couldn’t imagine the horror I would go through if I knew the pet that I had loved was being used for a craigslist scam.

I know that some people would want to recoup their ‘losses’ when trying to find a pert a new home but I would recommend trying to find an adoption shelter in your area instead.

While not as good as a puppy you can win a free CCL T-Shirt.

Craigslist crime post #1277
Scam post #191

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Woman falls victim to Craigslist check fraud:

This reminds me a lot of the tutor scam but both is a variation of the fake check scam.

Anyway what happened is that a woman in Clarksville, Tennessee was scammed out of $2,950. She had posted an ad on craigslist for her daycare service. The scam artist claimed to be from the UK and that he would be there on business and would pay $600. The scammer sent a check for $3,600 and asked the overage to be returned.

No wiring this time as the scammer met the victim in person. The victim had cashed the check and had given the scammer the money. Of course the check was fake.

However an arrest has been made. Police arrested 26-year-old Tarrance Kerry Freeman who allegedly tried to fake a seizure at the time of his arrest.

Remember people, a check for over the asking amount is fake.

But you can win a very real CCL t-shirt.

Craigslist crime post #1273
Scam post #190

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Deputies: Craigslist Seller Scammed By Buyer:

A woman from Boiling Springs, South Carolina is out of $1700 after cashing a fake check. She was selling a microwave on craigslist for $670 and received a check from a scammer calling himself Dr. Dreman. The victim cashed the check and wired the difference before finding out the check was a fake.

You know, craigslist does have the capability to block Nigerian IP addresses. I wonder if they’re getting Nigerian kickbacks.

I’m only half kidding about that.

Craigslist crime post #1245
Scam post #180

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Craigslist can also be a haven for scams:

Besides obvious headline being obvious this article provides a lesson to be learned.

It’s basically your usual fake check scam where a woman in Sebring, Florida was trying to rent a property on craigslist and received two checks and was asked the wire the difference via Western Union.

If you’ve been paying attention you’ll know that checks over the asking amount and being asked to wire money are two huge red flags of a craigslist scam.

Luckily the woman was smart enough not to fall for the scam. However it seems that her friends are not the sharpest tools in the crayon box. They allegedly advised her to deposit the checks so the scammer can be charged with fraudulent check writing. That is possibly the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard when it comes to these scams. Surprisingly this is not the first time I’ve heard this. So let me repeat this and be perfectly clear.

Don’t ever cash a check that was sent to you that was over the asking amount…ever.

If you cash or deposit the checks and they turn out to be fakes you will be held responsible for that money to your bank. The scammer will more than likely not ever br prosecuted because for the most part they operate outside of the country and are very difficult to prosecute.

As I’ve said before the more knowledge that is out there for people not to fall for these scams then the scammers will stop trying to prey on people. Unfortunately that is the only way to stop them.

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Family struggling to pay bills duped by fake cashier’s check:

This story happened back in February. A family from Onslow County, North Carolina were scammed when they sold their home entrainment center for $6000 on craigslist. They were paid with a cashier’s check in person that turned out to be a fake.

I received an e-mail from one of the family members saying they don’t want pity or want this to be a sob story but they want justice and want to be able to look the con artist in the eye. The family told me that the local police are swamped and haven’t been much help.

Please read the article to see if there is any information you might be able to give police.

Sheriff’s detectives are looking for a suspect described by witnesses as a white male with blond curly hair, green eyes and a short beard. He is around five feet 10 inches tall and weighs around 150 pounds. He was driving a 4-door older model white car with blue interior.

Crime Stoppers of Onslow County is offering a reward of up to $2,500 for information leading to an arrest or apprehension in the case.

Anyone with information concerning this incident can contact Onslow Crime Stoppers at 910-938-3273 or the Onslow County Sheriff’s Department at 910-455-3113. Callers do not have to reveal their identities.

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Check from a scammer bounces victim into jail

San Francisco resident Matthew Shinnick tried to sell a pair of mountain bikes on Craigslist late last year. He attracted a buyer, received a check in the mail — and ended up handcuffed by police in a downtown Bank of America branch and jailed for almost 12 hours.

Shinnick, 38, told me he’d received an e-mail in December from someone who said he was in Canada and was willing to pay a total of $600 for the two bikes offered on Craigslist.

“We never talked in person,” Shinnick said. “We just corresponded by e-mail over a series of weeks.”

The buyer finally said he was going to cut a check on his company’s Bank of America business account and arrange to have the bikes shipped north. Shinnick said he received a check for $2,000 shortly after Christmas and was informed that the extra cash was to cover shipping costs “and for my trouble.”

Shinnick, it appears, was a victim of the classic “Nigerian 419″ scam, adapted in this case to sucker in unwary Craigslist users.

Let’s stop there for a second. So far this doesn’t seem like the classic “Nigerian 419″ scam to me. The guy didn’t get an e-mail from Botswana Motutu saying that he was a beneficiary of a large sum of money. This is just a bad check scam. Anyway…

Typically, the scam involves a bogus check being sent by a fraudster as a part of a transaction. The transaction is subsequently canceled and, before the bank has spotted the check as a phony, the fraudster requests some or all of his money back — money that the victim unknowingly pays out of his own pocket.

Again, not a 419 scam…

Shinnick said he wasn’t aware of the scam while he was negotiating to sell his bikes — his first foray onto Craigslist. But he was made suspicious by the unexpectedly large payment.

“That was kind of a red flag because it’s a lot of money,” he said. “I didn’t want to deposit it into my account because I didn’t want it to bounce.”

So Shinnick, who resides on Nob Hill, stopped by a BofA branch near Union Square in early January. He said he asked a teller if sufficient funds existed in the BofA business account to cover the check.

“She said it was a valid account and that there were funds to cover it,” Shinnick recalled. “I said, ‘Great,’ and asked to cash the check.”

He signed his name on the back.

What Shinnick didn’t know is that he’d just become party to a crime. The bank account may have been real but the check was phony.

What he also didn’t know is that, according to the police report for the case, a warning had been placed in BofA’s computer system to watch for fraudulent checks drawn on the account in question.

The teller contacted the business and was informed that no check had been written to Shinnick for $2,000 or any other amount. She immediately passed the check to the branch manager.

“I saw him talking on the phone and staring at me,” Shinnick said. “A few minutes later, four SFPD officers came into the bank. They didn’t say a thing. They just kicked my legs apart and handcuffed me behind my back.”

The police report for Shinnick’s arrest says he was taken into custody “for the safety of the bank employees as well as the bank customers.”

Shinnick said he was never read his rights. He said he was instructed by one of the cops to keep his mouth shut and not say anything. Shinnick said he remained handcuffed in the bank lobby for about 45 minutes while the police spoke with BofA workers.

“As people were coming in to do their banking, I was in plain view of everyone,” he recalled. “I was absolutely mortified.”

Shinnick was taken to Central Station on Vallejo Street, according to the police report. He said he was taken by van about an hour and a half later to the Hall of Justice on Bryant Street.

At the Hall of Justice, Shinnick said, he was finally allowed to call his parents after almost five hours in custody. He said he was photographed and fingerprinted, and then strip-searched and given an orange jumpsuit to wear.

“I was so humiliated, it was beyond belief,” he recalled. “It was an absolute, living nightmare. I felt like I was going to be one of those people who gets caught in the system and has no way of getting out.”

Shinnick said he was placed in a cell with about a dozen other inmates, mostly drug dealers and drug users.

“It was a small cell,” he said. “One guy was unconscious underneath the one toilet that was there for all of us to use. There was only one bed to sit on. I sat on the ground.”

Shinnick was finally released around 11:30 p.m., after his father paid $4,500 of $45,000 in bail. Within 24 hours, the district attorney’s office dropped all charges against Shinnick.

In July, a San Francisco Superior Court judge ruled that Shinnick was innocent by “findings of fact” — a decision that essentially erases all record of the case.

But by this time, Shinnick said, he’d spent about $14,000 clearing his name. He wanted that money back and he felt BofA should pay it.

BofA felt otherwise. Earlier this month, a bank vice president, William Minnes, wrote to Shinnick’s lawyer to say that “Bank of America can certainly understand that your client is angry at the bank.”

However, he said, BofA has no legal liability in the case because of the 2004 Supreme Court ruling. Minnes warned that “litigation would not prove financially beneficial” to Shinnick.

I feel kind of bad for the guy but he kind of brought it on himself. He accepted a a check from a foreign country for more than the amount he asked. This is why most online sellers only accept Paypal.

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