Archive for category Scams

Don’t Get Scammed in Aftermath of Storm

July 23, 2010, Milwaukee, Wis. – The Wisconsin Better Business Bureau is warning homeowners who were affected by last night’s severe weather to be wary of untrustworthy contractors trying to take advantage of your situation.

“It’s a sad fact that ‘storm chasers’ and scammers typically follow natural disasters,” says Randall L. Hoth, president/CEO of the Wisconsin Better Business Bureau. “In your haste to do repairs, don’t forget to research companies before you hire them. If you don’t, you could have an even bigger disaster on your hands.”

The Wisconsin BBB has more than 80 accredited businesses throughout the state in the water damage restoration industry. Click here for a list of BBB accredited businesses, which the user can filter by city or zip code. BBB accreditation means a business must abide by the BBB’s eight standards of accreditation.

Hoth offers these tips when hiring a contractor:

  1. Beware of “fly-by-night” contractors or “storm chasers” who swarm the area after a storm. They may not be properly licensed or insured, may be using inferior materials and may be hard to locate later if there is a problem with their work.
  2. Check out the company with the BBB. Call 800-273-1002 or visit www.wisconsin.bbb.org to check out the BBB’s rating on the company. Ratings can range from A+ to F and will tell you how many complaints (if any) the company has, how long it has been in business and where it is located.
  3. Ask for and check references. Trustworthy businesses should be able to direct you to references that will vouch for their credibility. Follow through and confirm the company’s reliability with multiple references before you hire.
  4. Beware of price gouging. Some unethical businesses may be marking up their products or services by as much as 500 percent. If you can wait to do any repairs until this busy time passes, do it.
  5. Make any temporary repairs, then take the time to hire ethical business contracts. Beware of companies who claim your home is structurally unsafe and needs expensive repairs.
  6. Check with your insurance company, and make sure to take pictures and document any repair needs as soon as possible.
  7. Compare bids, but determine which company will provide the best quality and not just the lowest price. Some “storm chaser” companies will offer rock-bottom prices, but may be unlicensed or providing inferior services. Legitimate contractors can provide a “Certificate of Insurance” that verifies they have current liability and workmen’s compensation coverage. Every consumer should verify that contractors are properly insured and licensed before allowing them to work on their property.
  8. Remember that reputable companies don’t ask for the entire fee up-front. Never pay more than one-third of the cost before repairs are complete. Also, pay by check or credit card instead of cash. These more secure methods of payment ensure that you will be more likely to track and retrieve your money in case of a scam.

For more information or further inquiries, please contact the Wisconsin BBB at www.wisconsin.bbb.org or 414-847-6000 (metro Milwaukee), (920)-734-4352 (Appleton) or 1-800-273-1002 (elsewhere in Wisconsin).

Scams, Lies, and Credit Cards: Fraud Rings Five Favorite Schemes

Courtesy: Fox Business.com

Even if you’ve become religious about shredding your credit card statements before you toss them away, criminals can still find ways to cheat you out of time and money. Investigators want you to watch for five of the fastest growing sources of identity theft and credit card forgeries:

#1: The Fraudulent Fraud Department
A scammer calls you, claiming to be from your bank’s credit card fraud investigation team. They rattle off your entire credit card number and mailing address, then ask you to confirm your recent $499 charge to an online retailer. When you say you didn’t make that charge, the caller asks for the three digit code from the back of your credit card. That’s all they need to unleash a flurry of charges to your account.

#2: The Server Skim
In restaurants and hotels, you’re likely to part ways with your credit card at some point. A fraud ring’s accomplice, often a hapless service worker paying off a gambling debt, runs your credit card through a handheld “skimmer” while out of your view. The contents of your magnetic stripe get transmitted to an accomplice who clones your card for big ticket purchases.

#3: The Nosy ATM
You think you’re playing it safe by looking for an ATM that’s part of your bank’s preferred network, in a well-lit neighborhood, under security cameras. What you might not notice are the extra chunks of plastic stuck to the teller machine. A magstripe skimmer can fit directly over an ATM’s own card reader, while a pinhole camera above the keypad captures your security code.

#4: The Suspicious Screen Saver
A good piece of malware doesn’t just show up on your computer by accident. Instead of sneaking in as a virus, the most effective identity theft tools pose as useful applications. Free screensavers and games can hide keystroke loggers that transmit every character you type to a remote location, revealing personal information like credit card numbers and bank passwords.

#5: The Awful Auction Escrow Service
You’ve just placed the winning bid for an eBay item, and the seller asks if you wouldn’t mind saving them some cash by paying through a special link instead of through the auction site’s own checkout system. Instead of buying a trinket, you’re really sending your credit card account details directly to an online fraud ring.

And if you’re not already wary, wait until your home phone and your cell phone both start ringing off the hook with strange, recorded sales pitches. Identity thieves tie up your phone lines while they drain your accounts. Your banks’ fraud departments won’t be able to reach you to confirm large charges, nor will you be able to use your own phone to call your card issuers. Security experts recommend keeping at least one private or emergency phone number, like a cheap, prepaid cell phone, to prevent this kind of identity hacking.

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Scam Alert!!!

YouTube Preview ImageThis is a very active telephone scam right now. Going on all over the United States including Wisconsin and New York. Touch base with family members so they don’t fall for this one.

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How identity thieves work

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An interesting video from McGruff the Crime Dog and our friends at the National Crime Prevention Council.

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Man Steals Peoples Banking Information

Check out this video on how easily your personal information can be obtained.

Man steals peoples banking information. [VIDEO].

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Simple Accidents or Insurance Scam? INSIDE EDITION Investigates

Is Jonathan Jones the worst driver in America? He has been in a whopping 42 accidents in the last nine years.

“Maybe I should have been more careful. Maybe…well, all right. I definitely should have been more careful,” Jones says.

But is there something else going on? Police have a video they say shows Jones’s white truck speeding through a Wal-Mart parking lot in North Carolina and deliberately smashing into another car.

“You smashed right into her,” INSIDE EDITION’s Chief Investigative Correspondent Matt Meagher tells Jones.

Police say Jones is a con artist who crashes into other cars to collect insurance money, always in parking lots.

“Police say that you were trolling those parking lots looking for people to smash into,” Meagher continues.

“No,” says Jones.

But police say video shows Jones’s truck circling the parking lot looking for a target. Alice Locklear and her daughter Crystal were in the car that got hit.

“He tried to say, ‘You hit me.’ And I’m like, ‘;No, you hit us,’ ” Crystal says.

INSIDE EDITION showed Crystal and her mother the video of the accident for the first time. “He was scoping us out!” Crystal says.

Jones denies committing any crimes, and says he’s not interested in making money off of insurance.

“The police say you made at least $10,000 off it,” says Meagher.

“I’d like to know where,” Jones replies.

via Inside Edition – News.

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Resource: Skimming Alert

Please review the attached PDF file about SE WI Skimming developments.

LINK: Skimming Alert – Regional

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Scam School: Con Job disguised as a Magic Trick

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On Scam School (a program by Revision 3) they teach people magic tricks and bar scams. Usually these scams are relatively harmless bar bets, but from time to time they can degenerate.

On the show they’ve covered a few magic tricks, and they’ve covered a few street crimes. This episode they’re going to combine the two and get a magic trick that acts as a smokescreen for an actual crime.

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