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  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by grandsalami
    +29 +1

    Passengers Falling Prey to ‘Bullet Scam’ at Manila Airport

    The job of airport security is to confiscate dangerous items from suitcases, but travellers have recently found the opposite is true in the Philippines’ Manila Airport, where staff have allegedly been dropping bullets into the bags of unsuspecting passengers. Legislators have called for an investigation into the supposed racket that extorts money from passengers by threatening to charge or arrest them for carrying illegal ammunition, the BBC reported.

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by cone
    +35 +1

    Nigeria crackdown on fake bank accounts

    Nigeria has launched a major crackdown on fake bank-account holders in a bid to reduce fraud in the banking sector. People were asked to enrol at their local banks to have their fingerprints taken, along with a photograph of their face by the end of Friday. Nigeria's central bank said non-registered customers would lose electronic access to their accounts. Huge sums are allegedly stolen from Nigerian banks as a result of forgery and illegal withdrawals.

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by zobo
    +43 +1

    44 Oil Executives and Truck Drivers Were Just Arrested for a Multimillion-Dollar Scam

    Dozens of New York City-area energy industry executives and truck drivers were arrested Tuesday as part of a law enforcement probe into a suspected scam on customers. DNAinfo reports the bust includes over 40 "owners, executives and truck drivers from some of the city's largest fuel oil companies" who police accuse of rigging oil trucks to shortchange customers on heating oil. The alleged scammers, who DNAinfo reported include eight owners of...

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by imokruok
    +18 +1

    We Don’t Want Mark Zuckerberg’s Charity

    Every dollar in Mark Zuckerberg’s private charity is a dollar wrested from public coffers — and democratic control.

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by Chubros
    +32 +1

    Jackpot-Fixing Investigation Expands to More State Lotteries

    The allegations read like a movie plot: a lottery industry insider installs undetectable software giving him advance knowledge of winning numbers, then enlists accomplices to play those numbers and collect the jackpots. And they secretly enrich themselves for years — until a misstep exposes them.

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by Appaloosa
    +43 +1

    Now the TSA can force you to go through the body-scanner

    Your next flight might include a mandatory trip through the body scanner…

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by robmonk
    +45 +1

    Dell customer telephone tech support scam may be an inside job

    For months now, Dell customers have been targeted by phone scammers who have way more information about their computers than they should. That’s led to suspicion that Dell may have been the victim of a hack. As one of the largest computer OEMs in the world, it’s easy to see why Dell would be a target. They’ve got a lot of customer data stored on their servers. It certainly looks as though at least some portion of a Dell database fell into the wrong hands...

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by doodlegirl
    +23 +1

    The 'bogus boss' email scam costing firms millions

    It's a boss's worst nightmare. You return from a trip to find that hundreds of thousands of dollars has been transferred out of company accounts - apparently at your instruction. But you have no idea what your accountant is talking about - you didn't give any instructions. This is what happened to Carole Gratzmuller, boss of a medium-sized French company called Etna Industrie.

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by geoleo
    +47 +1

    The First 'Nigerian Prince' Scam

    In 1966, Stanford University psychologists Jonathan Freeman and Scott Fraser observed an interesting phenomenon in their experiments: someone who has already agreed to a small request—like opening the door for you—would become more, not less, likely to agree to a larger request later on. In one study, they asked 150 housewives in Palo Alto, California, if they would sacrifice two hours of their time: a research team of five or six people would come...

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by geoleo
    +37 +1

    Auschwitz price-fixing claims: Israel police arrest nine

    Nine executives at Israeli travel agencies have been arrested on suspicion of fixing the price of high school students' trips to former Nazi death camps, including Auschwitz. Police say they are investigating allegations of a secret price-fixing arrangement by companies who organise the trips for students. Investigators have raided the homes of executives and frozen bank accounts. At least six travel agencies are accused of violating competition rules.

  • Analysis
    8 years ago
    by FivesandSevens
    +18 +1

    Can't Buy A Ticket To That Concert You Want To See? Blame Bots

    A report from New York's attorney general points to abusive practices in the market for live-event tickets on sites such as StubHub. Computer programs snap up seats faster than humans can.

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by wildcat
    +30 +1

    Season Passes Are Starting To Feel Like A Scam

    I was raised in a household that worshiped baseball. This meant I spent a good chunk of my weekly allowance on baseball cards. I was a collector. My father was a collector. It was serious business for us, yet even after opening hundreds of packs together, the thrill of seeing which cards we would get never lost its luster. In a way, it was my childhood version of a slot machine, complete with an unhealthy amount of anxiety that either gave...

  • Analysis
    8 years ago
    by FivesandSevens
    +34 +1

    The Lives and Lies of a Professional Impostor

    “Jeremy Wilson,” now at Rikers Island facing fraud charges, has used dozens of aliases as a professor, a commando, numerous executives and an Irishman, among other cons.

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by Apolatia
    +42 +1

    Scammers and Spammers: Inside Online Dating's Sex Bot Con Job

    Christopher Russell owned a small bar in Chesapeake Beach, Maryland, but, like a lot people these days, figured he had better odds hooking up online. Russell was 40 and going through a divorce, so he wasn't seeking anything serious. When he saw an ad for the dating site Ashley Madison, which boasted 36 million members and the tagline, "Life is short, have an affair," he decided to check it out. "It seemed like a very active community," he says.

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by everlost
    +44 +1

    Behind the Scam: What Does It Take to Be a 'Best-Selling Author'? $3 and 5 Minutes.

    I would like to tell you about the biggest lie in book publishing. It appears in the biographies and social media profiles of almost every working “author” today. It’s the word “best seller.” This isn’t about how The New York Times list is biased (though it is). This isn’t about how authors buy their way onto various national best-seller lists by buying their own books in bulk (though they do). No, this is about the far more insidious title of “Amazon Bestseller”...

  • Expression
    8 years ago
    by rexall
    +5 +1

    Cancer cons, phoney accidents and fake deaths: meet the internet hoax buster

    On 13 May 2012, friends of Dana Dirr, a 35-year-old surgeon in Saskatchewan, were greeted with a distressing message when they logged into Facebook: “URGENT PRAYERS NEEDED.” A post written by Dirr’s father informed her friends that Dana was fighting for her life after a head-on car accident. Dana had been airlifted to the very same trauma centre where she worked as a surgeon; in fact, she was meant to be on duty that night.

  • Video/Audio
    8 years ago
    by Appaloosa
    +19 +1

    Scamalot

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by zyery
    +9 +1

    Italy Moves to Toughen Penalties for Olive Oil Fraud

    Italian lawmakers voted on Tuesday to stiffen a legislative decree that Italian olive oil producers and other critics charged would decriminalize olive oil counterfeiting. Commissions in both houses of Parliament approved the decree but recommended that the government ensure that criminal law prevail over administrative sanctions, such as simple fines, in cases of commercial fraud.

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by hiihii
    +20 +1

    Dallas doctor who billed for services he didn’t perform guilty in $10M fraud scheme

    A Dallas anesthesiologist who submitted bogus payment claims — including one when he was actually under anesthesia for surgery himself — has been found guilty of bilking millions from the U. S. government. Dr. Richard Ferdinand Toussaint Jr. was convicted on all seven counts of fraud Thursday after a four-day trial in a Dallas federal court. Toussaint, 58, is the co-founder of Forest Park Medical Center, which had a history of paying physician kickbacks before it went bankrupt.

  • Current Event
    8 years ago
    by geoleo
    +32 +1

    Man charged with issuing $100 trillion in fake finance documents

    A federal grand jury has returned a new indictment against Hillsboro resident Winston Shrout, accusing him of defrauding U.S. financial institutions by issuing bogus documents and failing to file six years of income tax returns. The grand jury returned an indictment charging Shrout with 13 counts of making, presenting and transmitting fictitious financial instruments and six counts of willfully failing to file income tax returns. He's accused of making and issuing more...