CONSUMER ALERT
MIKE
COX
ATTORNEY GENERAL
The Attorney General
provides Consumer Alerts to inform the public of unfair, misleading, or
deceptive business practices, and to provide information and guidance on other
issues of concern.
NIGERIAN AND COUNTERFEIT CASHIER'S CHECK SCAMS
2008 UPDATE
If you have an e-mail account,
then you have received some version of what is often referred to as a Nigerian
letter. The con artists' creative stories seem endless and the e-mails purport to come from
all sorts of locations including Lagos, Nigeria, South Africa, Europe, and even
Canada. In one e-mail, it is a high-ranking government official contacting you,
while in another it is a bank employee contacting you to stand in as next of kin
for a dead millionaire. In another version, it is a widow contacting you for
investment advice. In yet another version, it is a religious person looking to
make a donation to your church. The versions are unlimited but the ultimate
result for a victim is the same - a large loss of money and an individual who is
ashamed he or she did not recognize the scam.
TRADITIONAL COUNTERFEIT CHECK SCAMS
For those who want more
background on how these scams unfold, here is the general progression of events:
- The potential victim
(target) receives an unsolicited letter, fax, or e-mail proposal.
- An offer is made to transfer
millions of dollars into the target's bank account.
- The target is asked to
provide bank account numbers, telephone numbers, and other identifying
information.
- Numerous documents are sent
to the target with official looking seals, stamps, etc. testifying to the
authenticity of the proposal.
- The target is eventually
asked to provide up-front or advanced fees to cover taxes, attorney fees,
transactions fees, bribes, etc.
- The target is often, but not
always, encouraged to travel overseas to complete the transaction.
In a more recent variation, the
con artist will set up a fake online bank and deposit funds into a bogus
account.
COUNTERFEIT CHECK SCAM VARIATIONS
Other tricks on this old scam
involve a response to an online offer to sell or auction goods (usually
expensive items). Here is how the scam may unfold:
- The con artist "buyer"
e-mails the seller to express interest in the item, offering to pay with a
U.S. bank cashier's check.
- Once the offer is accepted,
the "buyer" makes some excuse for sending a cashier's check that is several
thousand dollars more than the cost of the item and wants the seller to send
excess money: 1) to cover transportation costs for the purchased good; 2)
because the buyer's secretary made a mistake and put the wrong check in the
envelope; 3) with the purchased product; or 4) to a third party to cover an
existing debt.
- Credibility is added to the
ploy when the "buyer" insists that the money only be sent after the
cashier's check clears.
- The cashier's check is an
elaborate counterfeit, and it takes the bank longer than usual to discover the
fake.
- The seller thinks they
received a good check and sends the goods and the "extra" cash.
- The bank notifies the seller
the cashier's check is a counterfeit and removes the check amount from the
seller's account. The seller lost the goods and cash.
Another variation on a common
theme is a "mystery shopper" scheme. Consumers are approached to be "mystery"
or "secret" shoppers, and they believe they are being hired to evaluate the
effectiveness of a money transfer service. The scammer sends the consumer a
cashier's check for thousands of dollars. Then the consumer is instructed to
cash the check at their bank and then visit a large retailer that offers money
transfer services. The consumer is told to pretend to be a customer wiring
money to a relative in another country, usually Canada. The consumer is often
instructed to wire most of the money and keep the rest as payment for acting as
a "mystery shopper."
Other variations of counterfeit
cashier's check scams involve winning a lottery or sweepstakes or a work-at-home
job to act as an intermediary for international transactions or otherwise
facilitating the processing of payments wherein the consumer is asked to cash
checks for other parties.
With all variations of this
scam, the cashier's check received is a fake. After a few days or weeks,
when the consumer's bank realizes the check is counterfeit, the consumer is
responsible for paying the bank back thousands of dollars.
BUSINESSES CAN BE VICTIMIZED TOO
Businesses, such as hotels, can
also fall pray to counterfeit cashier check scams. In a variation on the
counterfeit check scams described above, hotel operators receive e-mails
requesting a reservation. The request generally looks like it is coming from a
travel agent outside of the United States. The e-mail provides bogus names of
future guests and dates of arrival. In most cases, the perpetrator will ask to
pay for the rooms and any other services using a cashier's check. When the
cashier's check arrives, the perpetrator tells the hotel operator that they
mistakenly sent too much money, and asks the hotel operator to send back the
rest. Or, the perpetrator may cancel the reservation or services for some of
the future guests and ask for a partial refund. As with most other counterfeit
check scams, the check the perpetrator sent for payment is fake. If the hotel
operator "returns" any money to the perpetrator, the business person is
responsible to the bank for that money when it is discovered that the original
check was bogus.
In order to make this variation
on the counterfeit cashier's check scam more effective, the scammers may target
smaller hotels and ask for reservations during the slow winter travel season.
Thus, hotel operators, especially of small hotels who need some guests during
the winter months to survive financially, may wind up losing a significant
amount of money.
Hotels, and all other
businesses, should be extremely cautious of requests such as those described
above. To further protect themselves, small business owners should:
- Accept only certified checks
or bank checks verified by the issuing bank;
- Not return any money until
your bank is sure this check is not counterfeit. Although funds may be
available for withdrawal within a few days, it may take a few weeks for a bank
to discover a counterfeit. Until everyone is certain it is real, don't spend
any of the money from the cashier's check.
COUNTERFEIT CASHIER'S CHECK ALERT
Consumers must be alert to the
fact that just because money from the check may be made quickly available this
does not mean a check is valid. The check must go back to the originating bank,
and it must clear. This process can take several days and, in the case of an
elaborate counterfeit, may take a few weeks.
REPORT ADVANCED FEE FRAUD
These con artists target senior
citizens. It is important to be alert to any sign that a vulnerable family
member is being victimized and to discuss such fraud with loved ones and their
caregivers. If you or someone you know lost money, then the activity can be
reported to the Secret Service's field office nearest you. Michigan has three
offices: Detroit 313-226-6400; Grand Rapids 616-454-4671; and Saginaw
989-752-8076. Additional contact information can be located in your phone book
or at
http://www.secretservice.gov/field_offices.shtml.
If the correspondence you
received involves a Canadian address or phone number, you may also wish to
inform PhoneBusters by sending an e-mail to info@phonebusters.com or calling
toll-free 1-888-495-8501.