Scams - We all need to be aware

I've replied to many spam emails - usually with something along the lines of "Can you show some creativity, or even a little effort? I can send you my paypal link, and for $5000 per campaign I can clean up the text and grammar. Native English speaker here."

They never reply.
 
Oh, those wacky scammers at it again!


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Shameless Scammer​

A particularly violent-minded scammer has been charged with extortion by federal authorities after unmasking himself on a popular sports podcast.

As 404 Media reports, a man named Idriss Qibaa has been charged by the FBI for straight-up threatening to kill and maim multiple people whose Instagram accounts he allegedly had locked them out of — the same people who often ended up seeking his help unlocking those very accounts.

In their complaint against the Moroccan national, federal prosecutors admitted that they figured out Qibaa's identity after he appeared on Adam "Adam22" Grandmaison's "No Jumper" podcast in January and "outlined an extortion scheme he has perpetrated against multiple victims." That scheme allegedly involves locking people out of their social media accounts and, much like mafia "protection" conspiracies, having them pay him monthly to keep access to their accounts.

During his appearance, Qibaa told the sports podcaster that he had more than 200 people who pay him for such services, and claimed he makes "more than $600,000 a month." When Grandmaison discussed various celebrities he'd spoken to who admitted to falling victim to such schemes, Qibaa responded that they were "getting extorted."

Be that as it may, the way Qibaa seemed to go about his own unlocking scheme is particularly brutal, as his alleged victims attested in the federal complaint against him.


View: https://youtu.be/mr71K-Hy-xU

Threatening Aura​

While this sort of plot is pretty commonplace, the scammer in question took it to the next level by not only harassing his alleged targets — which included an influencer, a journalist, a businessman, multiple dentists, a realtor, and a family member of a politician — but also by destroying their property and threatening to harm and kill the individual targets, their family members, and even one person's pet dog.

As Las Vegas' 8 News Now reports, Qibaa was arrested in Sin City this week after the FBI warned that he might be a flight risk with the money he'd acquired, which would allow him to "flee back to Morocco and 'live like a king.'"

Though he was in the United States legally, it remains unclear what will happen to Qibaa now that he's been arrested — but at the very least, the people he seemingly admitted to scamming and violently harassing will have some rest knowing he's off the streets and offline for now.
 
Scammers or con artists are always dreaming up new ways of getting you to turn over your hard-earned money. One of the latest scams involves showing up to a person’s house, usually someone elderly, and posing as a police officer, telling them a relative was involved in a fatal car crash.

Check out the radical police Cybertruck.

That kind of shocking news is enough to get the victim worked up, who then is relieved to learn their relative, usually a child or grandchild, didn’t die in the crash. However, there’s a catch: their loved one has supposedly been arrested and is being held in jail. That’s when the full trap is sprung as the scammer asks for the money so the jailed relative can be set free.

Under normal circumstances, a person wouldn’t fall for this scheme in a million years. But, when first presented with shocking information which at first sounds like a relative might have died violently, presented by someone posing as an authority figure, the victim is primed to hand over whatever is necessary to help the relatively supposedly in distress.

We’ve seen this scam before but it recently surfaced again, this time in Michigan, as covered by WJBK. Sadly, the elderly woman who was targeted went to the bank and withdrew the “bail money” for the scammer who showed up at her house to pick up the cash in person.

The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office has identified the scammer in this case as Juan Romero of Berwyn, Illinois. However, he’s still on the run with authorities asking the public for help finding him. That means the elderly woman he targeted is still missing her money, which we know is between $1,000 and $20,000 thanks to criminal charges filed against Romero.

Just remember, police will never show up at your house asking for money, either cash or using a card reader. Legitimate bail bondsmen don’t even do that. If you suspect someone isn’t who they say they are, call your local law enforcement and ask them to confirm. Any legitimate cop will appreciate your doing so.
 

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View: https://youtube.com/shorts/WWzRjgt6BF0?si=0qkblx8FMperAHQe
 
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I have a dash cam and I was able to help someone out by giving him footage of his accident that I had recovered.

But this would suck.


View: https://x.com/PicturesFoIder/status/1847315025779638317




I actually had one of those (sort of) pulled on me, back when I lived in Florida. Mine involved being at a light, having someone step off the sidewalk, having the driver in front of me slam on the brakes, and then complain of back pain when I hit him at about 15 mph coming off the line.

The really crap part is that the police believed me, noted that it was something happening in the area, and I still took the insurance hit because we couldn't 100% prove it was a scam, so my insurance had to pay out.
 
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