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Posted By: granny Door KNocking with Draw Ticketsl - 27th Oct 2012 9:39pm
Had a young man call a couple of days ago offering free draw tickets. He said it was a company and there would be A prize. Then he asked for my name and phone number. So thinking it could be a company trying to accumulate as many names and contact details for their own purpses (like selling them on), I declined the offer.

Only afterwards, realised it could have been for many unscrupulous reasons.

This is only to make people aware but, wonder if anyone else has had the same experience.
Posted By: Moonstar Re: Door KNocking with Draw Ticketsl - 27th Oct 2012 10:30pm
Did they have ID Granny?

I always feel a bit edgy about the youngsters who ask for sponsorship having only a grubby bit of paper.
Posted By: granny Re: Door KNocking with Draw Ticketsl - 27th Oct 2012 11:24pm
No ID Moonstar. Just a rubbish ticket with counterfoil.No licence number or ticket number on it.(don't know if that's necessary when they are free), even so.......seemed to have given quite a few away.
Posted By: Salmon Re: Door KNocking with Draw Ticketsl - 28th Oct 2012 8:08am

A new scam which is doing the rounds. I know you wouldn't pay for delivery of a gift to yourself, but somebody is making money out of it.
There is a new and clever credit card scam - be wary of those who come bearing gifts.
Please circulate this to everyone you know, especially
your family and friends .It just happened to someone a week or so ago in St.
Albans , and it can pretty well now be happening anywhere else in the
country .It works like this: Wednesday a week ago, they had a
phone call from someone who said that he was from some outfit called "Express
Couriers" asking if they were going to be home because there was a package for them, and the caller said that the delivery would arrive at their home in roughly an hour.
And sure enough, about an hour later, a Delivery man turned up with a beautiful Basket of flowers and wine. They were very surprised since it did not involve any special occasion or holiday, and they certainly didn't expect anything like it. Intrigued about who would send them such a gift, they inquired as to who the sender was. The deliveryman's reply was, he was only delivering the gift package, But allegedly a card was being sent separately;
(the card has never arrived!).There was also a consignment note with the gift. He then went on to explain that because the gift contained alcohol, there was a £3.00 "delivery charge" as proof that he had actually delivered the package to an adult, not just left it on the doorstep to just be stolen or taken by anyone. This sounded logical and they offered to pay him cash. He then said that the company required the payment to be by credit or debit card only so that everything is properly accounted for. The husband, who, by this time, was standing beside his
wife, pulled out of his wallet his credit/debit card, and 'John', the "delivery man", Asked the
husband to swipe the card on the small mobile card machine which had a small screen and keypad where he was also asked to enter the card's PIN and security number. A receipt was printed out and given to them.
To their surprise, between Thursday and the following Monday, £4,000 had been charged/withdrawn from our credit/debit account at various ATM machines, Particularly in the Midlands area! It appears that somehow the "mobile credit card machine"
which the deliveryman carried was able to duplicate and create a "dummy" card(?) with
all their card details, After the husband swiped their card and entered the requested PIN and security number. Upon finding out the illegal transactions on their card,
of course, they immediately notified the bank which issued them the card, and the credit/debit
account has been closed. They also personally went to the Police, where it was confirmed that it is definitely a scam because several households have been similarly hit.
WARNING:
Be wary of accepting any "surprise gift or package", which you neither expected nor personally ordered, especially if it involves any kind of payment as a Condition of receiving the gift or package. Also, never accept anything if you do not personally know and/or
there is no proper identification of who the sender is. Above all, the only time you should give out any personal credit/debit card information is when you yourself initiated the purchase or transaction!







Posted By: granny Re: Door KNocking with Draw Ticketsl - 29th Oct 2012 8:11am
Salmon, no wonder we are becoming a nation of paranoid, sceptics.

Thanks for that info., forewarned is forearmed.
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