As my dad would say… “you can’t fix stupid’”
Including the stupid of almost all in the main stream media. The headline of a "Certified cheque bounces" is completely false. He had a useless piece of paper. He did not have a certified cheque.As my dad would say… “you can’t fix stupid’”
While I agree, I can see many people falling for this. Most people have blind faith in "certified cheques" etc.As my dad would say… “you can’t fix stupid’”
I was thinking the same thing about coming at night but on the other hand, lots of people don't have work flexibility so that isn't the biggest flag.While I agree, I can see many people falling for this. Most people have blind faith in "certified cheques" etc.
The fact that the buyers could only come at night (when the banks are closed) might have raised the red flags for me.
But if the article is to be believed he required the funds to help a family member, so I am sure he was eager to assist and pushed his luck..
Agree, but for a 22k vehicle, I would look for options for everyone's safety.I was thinking the same thing about coming at night but on the other hand, lots of people don't have work flexibility so that isn't the biggest flag.
If the details of what they saw were commonly available, the scammers will fix the issues. Easier to assume that they are all fake unless you see the teller make it and hand it to you.I'm a little curious about one thing - the bank rejected the "certified cheque", which means they identified it as fake without even attempting to process it. It would be kinda nice to know what they spotted, so we could also look for these things
If you're depositing a certified check, ask the bank to call the issuing bank to ask if a certified check in the amount has been issued, on the date of the check.I'm a little curious about one thing - the bank rejected the "certified cheque"
The news reports shows the cheque in the story. Clearly the seller and this news organization do not know what a certified cheque look like. I expect more from the news but who am I kidding.I'm a little curious about one thing - the bank rejected the "certified cheque", which means they identified it as fake without even attempting to process it. It would be kinda nice to know what they spotted, so we could also look for these things
To be fair, I have no idea what a certified cheque looks like, I have only used them a few times in my life and got them from the bank so paid little attention to the intricate details. I am sure I am not alone in this.The news reports shows the cheque in the story. Clearly the seller and this news organization do not know what a certified cheque look like. I expect more from the news but who am I kidding.
If I were the reporting journalist, it would be difficult for me to excuse my inner Ricky Gervais and tell the guy that he is a complete prat. Their isn't a news story for stupid and it's in the hands of the police. Essentially he gave someone his asset and got a piece of paper with some ink.
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Aquantance sold motorbike , certified cheque , two guys in white ford van pick up bike , hand over cheque. Aquaintance goes to bank , deposits cheque, they say congrats on sellingb your motorbike. Three days later the bank calls him, fake cheque. Take funds back out of his account .
No bike, no money (18kish) , all he knows is 2 guys , white van . Cell number he had was a phone card app.
World is changing. The last time I did a certified cheque (better than 5 years ago), it was embossed with the amount and with "certified" across the cheque.
The cheque in question has neither markings.
Curious as to.what a current certified cheque looks like now.
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Does it matter? My guess is it is in QC blending in (with dodgy paperwork), it got re-vinned as one that was crashed but not reported or it went in a container. In any case, the chance this guy ever sees it or his money again is very low.I guess the next question is what are the chances that the Slingshot is still inside the country?