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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Feb. 25, 2008

Contact: Wylita Hooks
972-393-6737
Wylita.d.hooks@usps.gov

usps.com/news

U.S. Postal Service Provides Consumers Awareness to Flaky Issue

Fake Scams Not a Typical Situation

DALLAS, TX – The Postal Services cares about their customers and continue to bring awareness and information about the typical types of fake check schemes so that customers can avoid these types of scams.  To help customers to avoid these situations, and recognize them before they are victimized, the Postal Service wants to provide customers with the following scenarios:

Foreign Business Offers
The potential victim receives an e-mail from a supposed foreign official, businessperson, etc., with a proposal. The sender wants to move large sums of money from a foreign country and needs assistance. The victim is usually offered a portion of the proceeds. If the victim agrees, he usually receives checks for large sums of money in the mail. The victim deposits the checks into his bank account and the funds are posted to the account and shown as “available.”
The fraudster wishes to send more money to the victim but quickly needs a portion of it returned in order to supposedly bribe an official, pay transfer fees, etc. The victim believes the previously deposited checks were genuine because the funds show as “available” in his bank account, so he honors the request and wires a portion of the funds back to the fraudster. The original deposited checks are returned as counterfeit and the victim is then held responsible for the loss and associated fees.

Sudden Riches
The potential victim receives a letter stating he has the right to receive a substantial sum of money. For example, the letter may say that the potential victim has won a foreign lottery or is the beneficiary of someone’s estate, such as that of a long-lost relative. The letter will inform the victim that he must pay a processing or transfer fee before receiving the money. However, a check or money order is enclosed to cover the required fee. The letter will ask the victim to deposit the check or money order into his bank account and wire the fee to a third party, usually in a foreign country.

No legitimate contest promoter will ever ask for money to be paid up-front in order to send out a prize. It is also wise to ask yourself whether you even entered the contest in the first place.

Work-at-Home Schemes
The potential victim answers an online advertisement, or posts his résumé on a job search Web site. The victim is awarded a job, “Payment Processing Clerk,” “Accounts Receivable Clerk,” etc. The victim’s new employer is an international company located overseas. The company claims it costs too much to process U.S. checks in its own country and the victim’s new job will be to receive and deposit payments from its customers — in checks made out to the victim — and wire nearly all of the money back to them. This, the advertiser claims, will somehow save the company time and processing fees.

The victim is instructed to keep 5 percent to 10 percent of the check value as his work-at-home salary. The victim deposits the checks and wires the money to the fictional employer when the funds are shown as available and posted to his account. It is done, of course, before the deposited checks actually clear.

Love Losses
A scam artist poses as a single person looking for a relationship through an online dating service. The scammer may even include an attractive photo in the correspondence so the victim can “put a face with a name.” It’s often a photo the scammer found using an Internet search engine.

As the online “relationship” progresses, the potential victim is told that funds are needed to pay for travel expenses for his/her “new companion” to travel to the United States so that the two can “begin their life together.” The victim soon receives checks or money orders. The victim is instructed to deposit the check or money order into his/her bank account and transfer a portion of the funds, via a wire service, to cover the travel expenses. Not long after the money is wired, the companion disappears into cyberspace.

Overpayments
A scammer offers overpayments on items that a consumer advertised in the classifieds or on an online auction. The scammer sends the seller a check or money order for more than the purchase price and then asks that the extra money be sent to someone who will take care of shipping.

In another scenario, scam artists say that a check or money order payment will come from someone who owes them money and tell the victim to deduct his/her share and send the rest. They may claim they are in a foreign country and that because of currency differences it’s difficult to make payment directly.

There is no reason to have someone else send payment.

Scammers sometimes claim they sent the wrong amount “by mistake” and ask victims to return the excess. Legitimate buyers will be happy to send the exact amount you are owed.

Rental Schemes
Finding a good roommate or someone reliable to rent your property is hard enough without being tangled up in a fake check scam. Learn the warning signs:

  • They claim to be moving from outside the area, even from another country, and send a check or money order for rent in advance plus extra to cover the cost of shipping their belongings.
  • They ask you to forward the shipping money to someone, but they can just as easily send it themselves.
  • They have unexpected expenses and ask you to cash a check or money order or send some of the deposit back as a favor. But they never intend to move in, and by the time you discover the scam they’ve moved on to the next victim.
  • Their check or money order for the vacation rental includes additional money to rent a car. They ask you to send the additional money to someone who will make those arrangements.

Legitimate renters will be happy to send the exact amount you are owed.

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Please Note: For broadcast quality video and audio, photo stills and other media resources, visit the USPS Newsroom at www.usps.com/news.

An independent federal agency, the U.S. Postal Service is the only delivery service that visits every address in the nation — 146 million homes and businesses. It has 37,000 retail locations and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to pay for operating expenses, not tax dollars. The Postal Service has annual revenues of $75 billion and delivers nearly half the world’s mail.