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16 Oct 2014 16:53 #218787
by chairman
A man was conned out of more than £200,000 in a telephone scam, police revealed as they warned the public to be vigilant for fraudsters.
The 68-year-old, from the Peterhead area of Aberdeenshire, was one of a number of people targeted over the past few months, Police Scotland said.
Under the scam, known as Vishing, criminals phone individuals, claiming to represent their bank and telling them their account has been compromised.
The victim is then encouraged to transfer their money, often their life savings, into a "safe account" provided by the fraudster.
Police are urging people to be aware of calls of this nature and to make sure elderly or vulnerable family and friends are aware of such scams.
Constable Kev Marron, from Police Scotland's Crime Reduction Unit, said people have to be on their guard.
Always tell someone how you feel because opportunities are lost in the blink of an eye but regret can last a lifetime.
cricketwindies.com/forum/
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pattycake
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16 Oct 2014 21:10 #218805
by pattycake
Damn...
There's still people out there falling for the pigeon drop?
I find that hard to believe. ::LOL::
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robzs2ap
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17 Oct 2014 14:45 #218995
by robzs2ap
I fell terrible for the victim. It must have been devastating when he learned he was scammed. I remember getting a similar text message before, it said there was problem with my bank account. There was even an instruction to call a different phone number to reach the bank's security department. The problem was, I didn't have an account with the bank. I contacted the bank and reported the scam.
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robzs2ap
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pattycake
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17 Oct 2014 15:00 #219004
by pattycake
But banks don't operate like that. And everyone should know that by now.
The only thing that can be wrong with your account is somebody trying to hit it, and your bank will call you to verify a certain charge that looks suspicious to them. If they can't contact you then they'll freeze your account until you come in to speak to them. No bank would engage it's customer to transfer money anywhere. That's nothing but a pigeon drop and I can't believe there's still people out there falling for it.
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Snoopster
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17 Oct 2014 15:20 #219010
by Snoopster
They fell for Madoff and Sir Allen certificates of deposits offering 15% rates of return.
There is a sucker born every minute Bro.
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pattycake
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20 Oct 2014 00:50 #219313
by pattycake
But that's different from the pigeon drop. The pyramid is an age old money game that capitalist and wannabes been playing for thousands of years. In recent times it was renamed Ponzi scheme, but it's the same pyramid game going all the back to the first civilization of Sumer. It's a known gamble from the start. But the pigeon drop is a whole different thing. It's the kind of yokey doke that you can't get hit with but once, because an ignoramus is tricked into parting with their money, and when that s*** happens you won't fall for it ever again. At least I've never seen a person who fell for the pigeon drop twice.
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Snoopster
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20 Oct 2014 11:56 #219360
by Snoopster
Greed will make people fall for anything. Be it the pigeon drop or the Ponzi scheme. The common denominator is human greed. The really good fraudsters are experts in exploiting people over their own greed.
The pigeon drop on the old man above is really about numbers though. The fraudsters call about a 1000 people and it's a good day if they con only 1 of them.
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vegito12
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20 Oct 2014 20:41 #219421
by vegito12
I think the man should of gone to his bank to find out if anyone from there did make a call to do this. The man may have been naive, and believed the person on the phone as genuine and thought his account is locked or a problem with it. It is sad how people will stoop low to make easy money, by taking it from someone else and enjoying themselves and not caring about the victim.
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Warning after man is conned out of more than £200,000 in phone scam
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