Swindlers' List: Dieters, Debtors and You
By Michelle Singletary, Washington Post
Thursday, November 8, 2007; Page D02
One would think that consumers would
have become hip to most frauds thanks to the constant warnings
by consumer groups and federal agencies.
And yet, the victimization continues.
For example, the Internal Revenue Service has issued warnings
over the last several months urging people to ignore bogus
e-mails that, at first glance, appear to have been sent from
the agency. The most recent advisory cautioned about a scam
e-mail asking for charitable contributions to victims of the
Southern California wildfires. The e-mail contains a link that
sends recipients to a Web site that looks similar to the IRS
site. The scam is set up to steal personal and financial
information.
Another fraudulent e-mail told taxpayers that they were
eligible to receive a tax refund.
You're probably saying to yourself: Who in their right mind
would respond to fake e-mails, lottery scams or bogus business
ventures?
Well, millions of people do.
The Federal Trade Commission reported recently that in 2005,
30.2 million adults -- 13.5 percent of the adult population in
the United States -- were victims of fraud.
It shouldn't be surprising (wasn't to me) that people in
debt are more likely to believe a lying, low-down crook.
Desperate, debt-ridden consumers are most often snared by three
types of scams: advance-fee loans, credit repair and debt
consolidation.
But overall, the FTC survey found that more people -- an
estimated 4.8 million -- were victims of fraudulent weight-loss
products than of any other scheme covered in the survey.
Maybe in this case, victim isn't the right word. Gullible
might better describe the people who pay lots of money for
weight-loss products that include nonprescription drugs,
dietary supplements, skin patches, creams, wraps and the like.
None of the products delivers on the promise that the user can
lose a substantial amount of weight.
The FTC reported that fraudulent foreign lottery offers and
buyers-club memberships tied for second place, with an
estimated 3.2 million victims for these two scams.
If you have an e-mail address, you've probably gotten a
lottery scam e-mail. I get them almost daily. This scam mostly
works by getting people to send money (a fee, they are told, or
to pay taxes) in order to collect their winnings. In the case
of buyers clubs, unsuspecting people are billed for memberships
for which they never signed up.
The Foreclosure
Fraud Alert Website http://www.foreclosurefraudalert.com/
The
Foreclosure Fraud Alert
Blog
http://www.foreclosurefraudalert.com/fraudblog
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