Be Aware of Karate/ Kung Fu E-Mail Scam

True2Kenpo

Purple Belt
Joined
Sep 29, 2002
Messages
329
Reaction score
6
Location
Pittsburgh, Pennyslvania USA
Fellow Martial Artists,

At the beginning of this year, I received an e-mail from someone stating they were from the U.K. and wanted to enroll their son in karate/ kung fu lessons for an entire two month period. They wanted you to contact them back with a total price and then they will send a check to you for the amount.

Well I never contact them back, but low and behold about two weeks later a check arrived in the mail from a strange address for a few thousand dollars. You know what they say "If it looks to good to be true, it probably is!"

Needless to say, the check was a fraudulent check. I turned it into a Pittsburgh detective and they confirmed my suspicions.

I bring this up now because just a few minutes ago I received another e-mail with the same scam and it was sent to a large list of e-mail addresses seeming to belong to many other martial artists.

Please be very cautious! If you have any questions, please contact me at (**********).

PS: I attached the e-mail I received below my signature.

Respectfully,
Joshua Ryer

* * * * * * * * * *

E-Mail From: scotben121@removed
Hello,
I am Scott Benson, an Enginner from UK. My son (James) 15 yrs old, is coming to your area for 2 months holiday and I want him to use the opportunity to learn more in your lesson, so that will keep his time instead of being idle. I will like to have the cost for the 2 months lesson now. I have a business associate in USA that is ready to take care of the whole expenses needed in the trip. So kindly get back to me now with the quote for the 2 months lesson (2 lessons a week and 1hr per lesson). I will be waiting to have the quote along with the below information form you so that I will forward it to the payer immediately.
Complete Name:
Complete Address:
Cell Phone Number:
Regards.
Scott Benson
 
Moderator's note:

Thread moved to Horror Stories.

-Ronald Shin
-MT Moderator
 
I think I'm missing a piece of this. Does the child show up & take class? I so, I see where it's fraud for sure. If the guy just sends a bad check, (& not a student) I see it mostly as a hassle for you the school owner. Perhaps it's fraud, too (I'm not sure.)

My point is, did the child come & train?
 
Perhaps it's fraud, too (I'm not sure.)

It is fraud, whether or not the child comes to take classes.

Depositing a fraudulent check can subject the depositor (in this case, the school owner) to a range of issues...from extra bank service fees to a criminal investigation for receipt of stolen goods.

Depending on the scam, the depositor may also risk relaying their personal bank information to the scammer, which could subject the depositor to additional loss by automated clearinghouse transfers out of the depositors accounts...transfers that do NOT need the depositor's express consent.

Sad that there's so many people trying to bilk innocent folks out of their hard-earned cash.
 
Fellow Martial Artists,

At the beginning of this year, I received an e-mail from someone stating they were from the U.K. and wanted to enroll their son in karate/ kung fu lessons for an entire two month period. They wanted you to contact them back with a total price and then they will send a check to you for the amount.

Well I never contact them back, but low and behold about two weeks later a check arrived in the mail from a strange address for a few thousand dollars. You know what they say "If it looks to good to be true, it probably is!"

Needless to say, the check was a fraudulent check. I turned it into a Pittsburgh detective and they confirmed my suspicions.

I bring this up now because just a few minutes ago I received another e-mail with the same scam and it was sent to a large list of e-mail addresses seeming to belong to many other martial artists.

Please be very cautious! If you have any questions, please contact me at (**********).

PS: I attached the e-mail I received below my signature.

Respectfully,
Joshua Ryer

* * * * * * * * * *

E-Mail From: scotben121@removed
Hello,
I am Scott Benson, an Enginner from UK. My son (James) 15 yrs old, is coming to your area for 2 months holiday and I want him to use the opportunity to learn more in your lesson, so that will keep his time instead of being idle. I will like to have the cost for the 2 months lesson now. I have a business associate in USA that is ready to take care of the whole expenses needed in the trip. So kindly get back to me now with the quote for the 2 months lesson (2 lessons a week and 1hr per lesson). I will be waiting to have the quote along with the below information form you so that I will forward it to the payer immediately.
Complete Name:
Complete Address:
Cell Phone Number:
Regards.
Scott Benson

I received that same exact e-mail as well as several others over the past year.
I forwarded one on to be looked at by an authority and I now send to the trash the ones I get.
For the fun of it I responded once and asked for detailed info as well as a credit card number that I could authenticate and they never responded back. Pretty much what I expected.
 
The English used in the email reads like someone who doesn't have English as their first language.
 
Check Overpayment Scams: Seller Beware

Thinking of selling a car or another valuable item through an online auction or your newspaper’s classified section? If so, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation’s consumer protection agency, wants you to know about check overpayment scams.
According to FTC officials, the scams work like this: Someone responds to your posting or ad, and offers to use a cashier’s check, personal check or corporate check to pay for the item you’re selling. At the last minute, the so-called buyer (or the buyer’s “agent”) comes up with a reason for writing the check for more than the purchase price, and asks you to wire back the difference after you deposit the check. You deposit the check and wire the funds back to the “buyers.” Later, the check bounces, leaving you liable for the entire amount.
The checks are counterfeit, says the FTC, but good enough to fool unsuspecting bank tellers.
In a different version of the scam, the FTC says, consumers get a check that has their “winnings” from a lottery. They’re asked to pay taxes or fees. Sometimes, the sender claims to be trapped in a foreign country without any way to cash the check. Either way, federal officials say, if you deposit the check, you’ll lose.
Here’s how to avoid a check overpayment scam:
  • Know who you’re dealing with. In any transaction, independently confirm the buyer’s name, street address, and telephone number.
  • Don’t accept a check for more than your selling price, no matter how tempting. Ask the buyer to write the check for the correct amount. If the buyer refuses to send the correct amount, return the check. Don’t send the merchandise.
  • Consider an alternative method of payment. As a seller, you can suggest an escrow service or online payment service. There may be a charge for an escrow service. If the buyer insists on using a particular escrow or online payment service you’ve never heard of, check it out. Visit its website, and read its terms of agreement and privacy policy. Call the customer service line. If there isn’t one or if you call and can’t get answers about the service’s reliability, don’t use the service. To learn more about escrow services and online payment systems, visit www.ftc.gov/onlineshopping.
  • If you accept payment by check, ask for a check drawn on a local bank, or a bank with a local branch. That way, you can make a personal visit to make sure the check is valid. If that’s not possible, call the bank where it was purchased and ask if the check is valid. Get the bank’s phone number from directory assistance or an Internet site that you know and trust, not from the person who gave you the check.
  • If the buyer insists that you wire back funds, end the transaction immediately. Legitimate buyers don’t pressure you to send money by Western Union or a similar company. In addition, you have little recourse if there’s a problem with a wire transaction.
  • Resist any pressure to “act now.” If the buyer’s offer is good now, it should be good after the check clears the issuing bank.
  • Throw away any offer that asks you to pay for a prize or a gift. If it’s free or a gift, you shouldn’t have to pay for it. Free is free.
  • Resist the urge to enter foreign lotteries. Most foreign lottery solicitations are phony. What’s more, it’s illegal to play a foreign lottery through the mail or the telephone.
If you think you’ve been targeted by a check overpayment scam, file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission at www.ftc.gov or by calling 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357). For more information on buying or selling via an Internet auction site, visit www.ftc.gov/onlineshopping.
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free information on consumer issues, visit www.ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
 
Excellent to have all that detail on hand if any of us need it, chaps. Many thanks.
 
It is fraud, whether or not the child comes to take classes.

Depositing a fraudulent check can subject the depositor (in this case, the school owner) to a range of issues...from extra bank service fees to a criminal investigation for receipt of stolen goods.

Depending on the scam, the depositor may also risk relaying their personal bank information to the scammer, which could subject the depositor to additional loss by automated clearinghouse transfers out of the depositors accounts...transfers that do NOT need the depositor's express consent.

Sad that there's so many people trying to bilk innocent folks out of their hard-earned cash.

Ok, now I get it. I was trying to figure out what the angle of the scam was. (How he benfitted). That was a possibility I never thought of.

Thanks, Carol!
 
Back
Top