Secret Shopper Scam

daughtersrus

DIS Veteran
Joined
Feb 26, 2002
Messages
6,658
I know that a lot of people here are looking for a way to make a little extra money. I came across this article this morning while reading the paper and thought that I should post it here so that no one falls victim to this scam.

I hope that I'm not violating any policies.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/services/site/premium/access-registered.intercept
Here's an offer you should refuse
`Secret shopper' letter isn't what it appears to be, authorities say


By Jeff Coen
Tribune staff reporter

January 4, 2007

The letter offers one of those jobs people fantasize about: getting paid to shop undercover and then report on the service.

But the invitation to become a secret shopper isn't what it appears. Authorities in the U.S. and Canada say it's one of the latest clever swindles designed to lure the unsuspecting into depositing a bogus check and wiring money from their account back to the scammers.

The offer from an organization calling itself "The Shopping Group" appears with well-known corporate logos along the bottom of the first page, including Target and Wal-Mart. Among those who received it in the Chicago area in recent weeks was an Illinois Appellate Court judge who didn't fall for it, investigators with the U.S. Postal Inspection Service said.

"Congratulations!" the notice begins, informing recipients that they have been recommended for the job by a relative.

And the first "probational training assignment" seems easy enough. Just deposit the enclosed check for $2,900 in the bank, pocket the $400 from that deposit and wire the rest back to The Shopping Group. As the shoppers are wiring the money, they're instructed to use the enclosed form to rate the courteousness and professionalism of employees at the MoneyGram location chosen to complete the mission.

"The aim of this training assignment will be to evaluate the effectiveness, efficiency and customer service of that particular [MoneyGram] location," the letter says.

"Have fun!" is the final direction.

Those unfortunate enough to be taken in by the ploy, however, will find themselves out more than $2,000 once they realize the check has bounced and they've already wired money from their bank account.

"This is a pretty good one," U.S. Postal Inspector Michael Carroll said of the scheme. "People will fall for it."

Investigators with the Postal Inspection Service said contact information for the company can be traced to Canada, and efforts are under way to determine who is behind it. About 50 complaints have been made nationwide so far, Carroll said, including a handful in the Chicago area.

Carroll said investigators are attempting to determine if those running the scam have taken on the name of a legitimate company. Calls to a Las Vegas marketing firm mentioned on a Web site listed in the materials were not returned.

Police with the Waterloo regional police in Ontario, Canada, said the organization calling itself The Shopping Group has been on their radar since the fall, when complaints first began filtering in.

"They've used a number of local addresses and phone numbers here in an attempt to suggest they are somehow legitimate," said Olaf Heinzel, public affairs coordinator with the police office.

The letter reported to postal inspectors in Chicago includes an address in Baltimore and a phone number. The Better Business Bureau of Greater Maryland has issued a fraud report after receiving complaints from across the U.S.

"The Shopping Group has an unsatisfactory record of complaints alleging the use of counterfeit checks that have created severe overdrafts to the bank accounts of consumers who accept the company's offer of `work assignments,'" the bureau's report states. "The company has used the address of a private home and a non-existent address in Baltimore as their own addresses."

Calls to phone numbers listed for The Shopping Group in the U.S. and Canada were not returned Wednesday.

Cathy Rebuffoni, spokeswoman for MoneyGram, said the company does not use secret shopping services to rate its performance. Such scams are always evolving, Rebuffoni said, and the company works with authorities to identify them and train employees to know what to look for.

She said the first rule is to know exactly whom you are wiring money to. "It's like sending cash," she said. "And once someone is there to pick it up, it's gone."

The mystery shopper scheme is just one of a variety of scams that involve sending victims a bad check and having them wire money back from their bank account, investigators said. Many are believed to originate in Nigeria, they said.

In recent months check scams have surfaced on Internet personal ad and job sites, where those seeking work are recruited. Some have fallen for "job offers" to work as a check-casher for what is purported to be a foreign company, authorities said.

The first check arrives with instructions for the victim to keep 10 percent of the total and wire the remaining funds back to the company. The check again is bad, Carroll said. In some instances scammers have taken an even more sinister approach, Carroll said, contacting victims on Internet sites such as myspace.com or responding to requests for roommates. They befriend their target first through e-mail and then eventually ask for a favor that involves cashing a bogus check and wiring money.

Many people fall for the scheme because they are getting money up front, Carroll said.

Representatives from banks and wire companies are expected in Chicago next week to talk about some of the latest fraud ploys, he said.

The Shopping Group trick may be among the most brazen in recent years, investigators said, with the scammers going so far as to send a code of business conduct and ethics along with materials that would-be victims receive.

If you feel you've been victimized, call postal inspectors in Chicago, or make a complaint at www.lookstoogoodtobetrue.com.

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jcoen@tribune.com
Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune
 
Thank you so much for this advice. I get e mails almost daily about mystery or secret shoppers. They go to my spam folder and I have never opened one. But on the other hand I have been thinking I would love to try mystery shopping but have no idea how to start. I will surely be careful if I do try. Thanks again.:surfweb:
 
A lot of people want to work as a mystery shopper and you can make some decent money doing so. I hope that this post helps some people realize how to find legit work!
The first thing to realize is that you should never pay someone to get you work.
The second is that mystery shopping NEVER (ok, I shouldn't say never, but certainly never initially) will cost you a huge output of money.
For example, when I've had to do bank shops, I usually have to get change and file a report, or make a deposit into my own account (using my own money) and file a report. Or I've had to attempt to cash a check at a bank I didn't have an account at to see if they would let me and if they'd ask for proper id. I'd never have been sent a large check to then wire money to anyone.
Most of the purchases you have to make require you to spend less than $10 (unless it's a dinner out or something). It can take a long time to get reimbursed, just so you know.
If you are looking for a listing of legit sites, you can go to volition.com, they have one there that is a very good list of real sites. :)
I hope this helps even one person!
 


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