Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Canadian Granny Scam Dupes Americans

Telephone scammers in Canada love Americans. They also have found that some of the American people are incredibly easy to fool with a scam. If they can concoct a convincing story, they can get people to send them thousands of dollars.

With the Granny Scam the caller pretends to be a grandchild in trouble in Canada who needs money immediately. The caller often says he’s been arrested, was in a car accident or had some type of medical emergency.

“I fell for it completely,” says Bill Wilson, 79, of Sequim, Wash., who got taken for $6,500. The caller, who pretended to be his grandson, said he was in jail in Canada.

This deviously clever scam is very effective because it catches the potential victims off guard and tugs at their heartstrings.

In 2007, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Call Centre received 128 complaints about this scam. Since the beginning of the year, more than 317 complaints were filed, and the majority of those were in July and August.

This sort of scam, based on an “emergency situation” has been around for years. But the Canadian Anti-Fraud Call Centre, also known as PhoneBusters, reports a dramatic increase in the number of complaints.

“We’ve seen tremendously high losses, usually $3,000 to $4,000 a hit,” says PhoneBusters’ spokesperson Debbie Bell. But some victims lose much more.

Because they are in another country, it’s hard to track down, let alone prosecute these telephone con artists. They know many tricks to avoid law enforcement.

The way to fight back is to make sure your friends and family members don’t become victims. Explain how the scam works. Tell them to be suspicious of anyone who calls unexpectedly and wants them to wire money – especially to Canada. Make sure they know the right thing to do is to call you or someone else in the family, even if they’re told to keep it a secret.

Source: MSNBC, USA

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David Blaine is a Fake

People are angry with endurance artist David Blaine. They say he is cheating in his stunt to hang upside down for 60 hours.

New Yorkers arriving at Central Park to witness his record attempt yesterday were surprised to find him standing upright, being examined by a doctor.

Blaine had previously pledged to drink through a straw while hanging and to urinate through a catheter, but the amateur video shows him standing and drinking bottled water.

After 15 minutes or so, he returned to hanging upside down. This has led the bloggers who went to view the stunt dismayed.

“This is like being on a hunger strike for 22 hours a day. You know, taking two hours off for lunch and dinner break,” wrote one.

Another said: “I arrived at 9am this morning to find him on the platform, and he stayed there for 20 minutes. I watched the time. And while this was happening, I asked a security guard what he thought about it. He told me, ‘yeah, it's kind of cheap, isn't it?’ I asked him how many breaks he'd seen him take this morning, and the guard told me ‘Three, maybe four, since eight when I arrived.”

Now, the upside hanging star might be hanged straight by the public!

Source: Livenews, Sydney, NSW, Australia

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

5 Ways to Identify a Fake Pound Coin in an Instant

According to a survey by the Royal Mint, in March this year about two out of every 100 of the 1.47bn pound coins in circulation fake coins. That's around 30m duff nuggets. And if one fake pound coin is in your pocket it is a criminal offence to spend it.

Follow these steps and you will have no trouble in identifying a fake pound coin:

1) The date and design on the reverse should correspond.

2) If the coin does not have the right picture for its year (Gateshead's Millennium bridge in 2007, for example) then it's a fake coin. The same applies to the inscription around the edge. You can check both at royalmint.gov.uk.

3) The milled edge may be poorly defined or the lettering uneven in depth and spacing.

4) If the Queen and the picture are faint, or not the same way up, or if the coin looks smart and shiny even though it has supposedly been jangling around 20 years.

5) Fake pound coins usually do not work in vending machines either, although some might say that hardly differentiates them from the real ones.

Source: guardian.co.uk, UK

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Aussies Sue International Olympic Committee for Ticket Scam

Australians and other victims of the online Beijing Olympic ticket scam are suing the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for millions of dollars.

Texan class-action lawyer, Jim Moriarty, is representing the 400 victims.

He also has his legal sights set on the London-based touts allegedly behind the scam, the US Olympic Committee and the official US provider of Beijing tickets, JetSet/CoSport.

Mr. Moriarty said, “The ultimate bad guys are the crooks in England and then the people that aided and facilitated their fraud and that clearly goes back directly to the IOC.”

Mr. Moriarty was also one of the victims of the ticket scam.

The 62-year-old lawyer lost $US12,000 ($14,235) in the ticket scam.

Mr. Moriarty said his lawsuits also would likely reveal why sports fans and the families of athletes were unable to secure tickets through the official Olympic ticket suppliers.

Many victims were told official ticket supplies were sold out despite plenty of vacant seats visible during the TV broadcast of the Olympics.

Source: News.com.au, Australia

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