Sujet : Re: [OT] Fraudster shows up at someone's door and refuses to leave without money
De : no_offline_contact (at) *nospam* example.com (Rhino)
Groupes : rec.arts.tvDate : 12. Apr 2025, 01:14:32
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vtcb9b$2vceh$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 2025-04-11 7:20 PM, anim8rfsk wrote:
Rhino <no_offline_contact@example.com> wrote:
This is one of the weirder crime stories I've heard in a while.
>
https://kitchener.citynews.ca/2025/04/11/fraudster-enters-guelph-home-refuses-to-leave-kitchen-until-paid/
>
What were these people THINKING? Why on earth would they fork over $4500
to some guy who insisted he was owed money? There's nothing in the story
that implies he used force or the threat of force to get the money but
it appears the homeowners knew his demands were bogus.
>
I can only assume they were incredibly stupid, incredibly gullible or
Old and scared
Good point. Old people often get taken in. I remember when I was doing tech support and one of my callers told me that she'd fallen for the grandson-in-jail-needing-bail-money scam.
Of course it's not just old people getting fooled. My brother got scammed several times and never seemed to learn from it. I don't know how many gift cards he bought for women he'd met online who begged him for money....
that he had some kind of blackmail that he could apply against them. But
the fact that they'd called the police afterwards, suggest that they
know they were being scammed and had no fear of what the police might
find out about them if they responded to their call.
>
As usual, the crime reporting in this area is abysmal and gives
virtually no information that would make this make sense, including the
answers to obvious questions.
I like the part where he took a check
I hope they had the sense to call the police and the bank the minute he left so that they could be forewarned and could arrest him when he tried to cash the cheque. Then again, if they had, the story would have been about his arrest. Even a signature that didn't match the signature card might have been enough to defeat him. Mind you, I don't know if there is anything resembling an attempt to match signatures any more; I suspect that's gone the way of the dodo and the banks just ignore signatures entirely. I don't know if my signature has ever matched the my signature card since it's completely inconsistent but I've never had a cheque refused because of it.
-- Rhino