Vital Information About Scams and Protection

By Odesi Desko

The phenomenon of check cashing fraud increases in frequency every day, and authorities have a hard time curbing it. Now that copy machines are more available and print at a higher quality than ever, scam artists have no problem with creating a phony check and copy it. Counterfeit checks are typically used on ad sites, international Internet sales, or businesses that are based out of someone's home for the most part.

Identification of a check cashing fraud is fairly easy in that one will be asked to deposit a check through their banking account for a larger amount that required then to forward the extra cash via Western Union or some other money transfer site. This can be advertised as a work at home job, rental, or the sale of an item or service.

For the most part, you can't really tell it's a fake check until the bank can verify it to be counterfeit, which doesn't happen until it's deposited, and you can't contact the other person. Since international funds often get held for a long while, you can deposit a number of checks and withdraw cash without anyone being the wiser until the week or so it takes to verify the check.

Getting the right information from those they want to defraud has become an art form to the scam artist. Using a money transfer site requires you to enter personal information which can be captured and used for the purposes of making all kinds of counterfeit checks and identification for the purposes of emptying the victim's account.

As we touched on earlier, these scam artists like to utilize work at home ads to lure their prey. One of these fake work at home jobs may require an individual to deposit international company checks, keep your payment of 10% for your pay, and send the rest of the cash back to the company. One such scam operates under the name WalMart, INC., which has no affiliation with the WalMart stores that that most of us shop at regularly. Check cashing scammers will also use sites such as Careerbuilder.com, Craiglist, and Gadgets Ltd., as a vehicle to contact victims, so you must be sure to always carefully investigate any apparent opportunity.

There are many scams currently going on with check fraud. One of the scams regarding check cashing has occurred with people being contacted and told they have won, or come into, a large amount of money. They are told that a money order or cashier's check will be sent for more than the amount they are to receive. They are asked to send back the difference through a wire transfer site immediately.

All this does is give the scammer the personal information that you provide on your bank info through the wire transfer service, this allowing them to empty your accounts; otherwise, they may just be ripping you off for the money you take out of your account. As a result, you should use info-trace.com/exchange-956276.jsp or another telephone look-up service to investigate whatever phone number they give you and see if they've had a history of scamming others the same way they want to scam you.

If you think you are in the middle of a check cashing scam, you should contact World Law Direct, but sometimes it can take a few years to work through a single case. When all is said and done, you may never see that money again. - 31381

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