Consumer Fraud Prevention Tips
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TRUST & GREED ARE YOUR
BIGGEST VULNERABILITIES.
DON'T BE A FRAUD VICTIM
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- Never pay for anything in advance where
requested to do so, never for services
nor for products sight unseen. If you do,
use your credit card because you may get
your money back where you have been
scammed and many scammers do not have
credit card accounts. Credit Card
Companies can do a chargeback to the
Merchant who processed the charge to your
card if it is a fraudulent scam.
- Promises of riches, and guarantees to
instantly double or triple your money are
scams.
- Never give out financial or personal
information about yourself to anyone via
the telephone, email or any other method
of communication where you don't know
with whom you are dealing.
- Never donate to an alleged charity in
response to a telephone call; it is
impossible to verify the legitimacy of
the so-called charity over the telephone.
Ask the organization to mail an
information package.
- There are Fraud Artists who scan the
Classified Ads for vehicles etc. in what
is known as the Nigerian Overpayment
Scam. They call up the Seller and advise
them that they are interested in
purchasing the vehicle but only have a Bank
Draft or Cashier's
Cheque/Check for considerably
more that the asking price of the
vehicle. They convince the Seller to
deposit the cheque/check into his/her
account and send the balance to the
buyer. Weeks later the cheque/check is
returned by the bank as Counterfeit.
The Seller has given the vehicle away and
a gift of cash to the Buyer. Never
accept a bank draft, cashier's
cheque/check or certified cheque/check
when the amount is greater than the
asking price and you are requested to
refund the balance. Verify the identity
of the Buyer; obtain a Driver's License
and/or other photo ID, and confirm
telephone number and address, and call
the payor of the cheque/check (usually a
business) to determine the actual
cheque/check details, (the name of the
payee, for instance) because in this scam
the payee has been altered.
- It is a scam if you receive a letter from
a Loan Company advising you that the
company can fix your bad credit and help
you obtain a loan, and particularly so if
they request an advance fee for their
services, in what's known as the Advance
Fee Loan Scam. The only way to
improve your credit rating is to pay off
your bad debts or wait seven years
without incurring any more bad debts to
have your record cleared.
- Never invest in anything
about which you know nothing. A website
can be created as a false storefront.
Conduct your due diligence by making sure
that you are dealing with a real person
and a legitimate business. Check out the
company with the Better Business Bureau,
check if the individual and company is
registered and/or licensed with the
appropriate Provincial or State
Securities Commission, ask for references
and find out if the company has a
business license. This is even more
important if you are considering
investing offshore which is very
high-risk.
- Never allow an
Individual who solicits you at the door
to repair or do renovations to your home.
If your home requires renovations obtain
a referral from someone whom you know and
trust. Check out the company with the
Better Business Bureau. Roof repairs are
probably one of the biggest scams with
respect to home renovations.
- Contracts mean nothing to Fraud Artists;
at best you have a civil matter if things
go awry as it will likely be difficult to
prove criminal intent. You must conduct
your due diligence prior to signing a
Contract and preferably you should have
some legal or expert advice. And NEVER
sign a blank contract.
- Every home should have a shredder; do NOT
throw financial or personal documents
(bank statements or income tax returns,
for example) in the garbage but rather,
ensure that they are shredded.
- Delete ALL unsolicited emails because
unsolicited emails are bogus. Remember,
neither financial institutions nor
businesses like eBay will send you
unsolicited emails asking you to supply
your account or password information.
When you receive one of these e-mails, DO
NOT click on unsubscribe links
instead of removing you from their spam
lists they confirm that you are receiving
and reading their spam. Just silently
ignore them and delete.
- Remove yourself from the mailing and
telephone calling lists of members the
American Direct Marketing Association to
help reduce the risks associated with
anyone intercepting or stealing your
mail. The American Direct Marketing
Association website is www.the-dma.org
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Note: There are many different scams
that are being perpetrated by Fraud Artists all
over the world. These Tips do not cover
everything. The best policy is that if it doesn't
sound right and seems too good to be true then it
likely is. You've heard this a hundred times;
remember it.
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