From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia "List of confidence tricks"
List of confidence tricks
- 1Get-rich-quick schemes
- 2Persuasion tricks
- 3Gold brick scams
- 4Extortion or false-injury tricks
- 5Gambling tricks
- 6Spurious qualifications or endorsements
- 7Online scams
- 8Religion-based schemes
- 9Other confidence tricks and scams
- 9.1Art student
- 9.2Bar bill scam
- 9.3Beijing tea
- 9.4Big Store
- 9.5Change raising
- 9.6Fake casting agent scam
- 9.7Phony job offer scam
- 9.8Fraudulent directory solicitations
- 9.9Jam Auction
- 9.10Money exchange
- 9.11Mystery shopping
- 9.12Pigeon drop
- 9.13Predatory journals
- 9.14Promotional cheque
- 9.15Psychic surgery
- 9.16Rain making
- 9.17Recovery room
- 9.18Rental scams
- 9.19Rip deal
- 9.20Unsolicited goods
- 9.21Wedding planner scam
- 9.22Blessing scam
- 9.23Pay up or be arrested scam
- 9.24Public transport ticket control scam
- 9.25Dropped wallet scam
It’s not always easy to spot con artists. They’re smart, extremely persuasive, and aggressive. They invade your home by telephone and mail, advertise in well-known newspapers and magazines, and come to your door.
Most people think they’re too smart to fall for a scam. But con artists rob all kinds of people – from investment counselors and doctors to teenagers and elderly widows – of billions of dollars every year.
- Don’t fall for anything that sounds too good to be true – a free vacation, sweepstakes prizes, cures for cancer and arthritis, a low-risk, high-yield investment scheme.
- Never give your credit card, phone card, Social Security, or bank account number to anyone over the phone. It’s illegal for telemarketers to ask for these numbers to verify a prize or gift.
- Don’t let anyone rush you into signing anything – an insurance policy, a sales agreement, a contract. Read it carefully and have someone you trust check it over.
- Beware of individuals claiming to represent companies, consumer organizations, or government agencies that offer to recover lost money from fraudulent telemarketers for a fee.
- If you’re suspicious, check it out with the police, the Better Business Bureau, or local consumer protection office. Call the National Consumers League Fraud Information Center at 800-876-7060.
- Be wary of 900 numbers. But remember, with modern technology scammers can easily call from what appears to be a legitimate phone number.
- Listen carefully to the name of a charity requesting money. Fraudulent charities often use names that sound like a reputable, well-known organization such as the American Cancer Association (instead of the American Cancer Society). Ask for a financial report before you donate; a reputable charity will always send you one.
- Investigate before you invest. Never make an investment with a stranger over the phone. Beware of promises that include the terms “get rich quick,” or “a once in a lifetime opportunity.”
Be a wise consumer
- Don’t buy health products or treatments that include: a promise for a quick and dramatic cure, testimonials, imprecise and non-medical language, appeals to emotion instead of reason, or a single product that cures many ills. Quackery can delay an ill person from getting timely treatment.
- Look closely at offers that come in the mail. Con artists often use official-looking forms and bold graphics to lure victims. If you receive items in the mail that you didn’t order, you are under no obligation to pay for them – throw them out, return them, or keep them.
- Be suspicious of ads that promise quick cash working from your home. After you’ve paid for the supplies or a how-to book to get started, you often find there’s no market for the product and there’s no way to get your money back.
- Beware of cheap home repair work that would otherwise be expensive, regardless of the reason given. The con artist may just do part of the work, use shoddy materials and untrained workers, or simply take your deposit and never return.
- Use common sense in dealing with auto repairs. Get a written estimate, read it carefully, and never give the repair shop a blank check to “fix everything.”
Telemarketing fraud
- Your best protection is to just hang up the phone. If you think that is rude, tell these callers politely that you are not interested, don’t want to waste their time, and please don’t call back – and then hang up. To add your number to the national “Do Not Call List”, visit the federal trade commission.
- If you find yourself caught up in a sales pitch, remember the federal government’s Telemarketing Sales Rule. You have to be told the name of the company, the fact that it is a sales call, and what’s being sold. If a prize is being offered, you have to be told immediately that there is no purchase necessary to win.
- If the caller says you’ve won a prize, you cannot be asked to pay anything for it. You can’t even be required to pay shipping charges. If it is a sweepstakes, the caller must tell you how to enter without making a purchase.
- You cannot be asked to pay in advance for services such as cleansing your credit record, finding you a loan, acquiring a prize they say you’ve won. You pay for services only if they’re actually delivered.
- You shouldn’t be called before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m. If you tell telemarketers not to call again, they can’t. If they do, they have broken the law.
- If you’re guaranteed a refund, the caller has to tell you all the limitations.
- And remember, don’t give telemarketers your credit card number, your bank account number, Social Security number – or authorize bank drafts – ever.
Examples of some classic cons
Although con artists come up with new scams as times change, some classic scams never go out of style.
The Bank Examiner
Someone posing as a bank official or government agent asks for your help (in person or via the telephone) to catch a dishonest teller. You are to withdraw money from your account and turn it over to him or her so the serial numbers can be checked or the money marked. You do, and never see your money again.
The Pigeon Drop
A couple of strangers tell you they’ve found a large sum of money or other valuables. They say they’ll split their good fortune with you if everyone involved will put up some “good faith” money. You turn over your cash, and you never see your money or the strangers again.
The Pyramid Scheme
Someone offers you a chance to invest in an up-and-coming company with a guaranteed high return. The idea is that you invest and ask others to do the same. You get a share of each investment you recruit. They recruit others, and so on. When the pyramid collapses (either the pool of new investors dries up or the swindler is caught), everyone loses – except the person at the top.
What to do
Don’t feel foolish, Reporting is vital
Very few frauds are reported, which leaves the con artists free to rob other people of their money – and their trust.
If you are the victim of fraud, call the police immediately. You may be embarrassed because you were tricked, but your information is vital in catching the con artist and preventing others from being victimized.
Source: Asheville, NC Government
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