Top consumer scams
Soldiers Magazine, Nov, 2003
Charity Fraud
FRAUDULENT fundraisers take advantage of donors' goodwill by misrepresenting who they are and what they do with the money they raise. To collect money from sympathetic individuals, solicitors often pick such popular charitable causes as support for police or firefighters and their families, or for veterans or terminally ill children. They also take advantage of such current events as the war in Iraq or the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Consumers can ensure their donations benefit the people and organizations they want to help by calling the charity to find out if it's authorized the use of its name and is aware of the solicitation. Also ask what percentage of the donation will be used to support the causes described and what percentage will be used for administrative costs. Contributors should get a receipt that shows the amount of the contribution and states it is tax deductible.
Credit-Repair Scares
ALLEGED credit-repair services claim the ability to erase bad marks from a consumer's credit history or to create a new credit identity, which is illegal. Such companies cannot do anything for consumers that consumers cannot do themselves at little or no cost, and they often charge high rates before services have been delivered. Many such companies vanish with consumers' money without delivering service. The most reliable way to clean up a credit history is to work with counselors in arranging a realistic repayment plan.
Debt Negotiations
DEBT negotiators and debt-settlement companies offer to cut consumers' bills in half by negotiating lower payoff amounts with customers' creditors. Often they tell customers to stop paying creditors and to send the money to them instead. The money gets placed in an account until the negotiator decides to make an offer to the credit card company. Meanwhile, the customers' accounts go unpaid and their credit is trashed.
Creditors often write off debt if no payment has been made for 180 days or six months. A write-off remains on consumers' credit reports for seven years plus 180 days from the date of the first nonpayment. So even if the negotiator manages to reduce the credit card balance, the consumer is still stuck with bad credit. A write-off may also cause problems with the Internal Revenue Service, because the amount of forgiven debt is viewed as income to the borrower.
Debt negotiators are also known to charge high fees. On top of application fees, they charge processing fees and demand a percentage of the money customers supposedly save when negotiators lower credit-card balances.
Employment and Work-at-Home Schemes
EMPLOYMENT scams usually end up costing people money rather than making them money. Employment ads boast high pay in fast-growing industries for those who want to work at home. Classic employment schemes range from medical billing to envelope stuffing and assembly or craftwork.
These ads don't disclose that consumers are often required to pay for instruction, equipment and supplies, and work many hours with no pay. Also, "employees" are responsible for selling their products. Promoters of these seams target people searching for family-friendly employment or who have low incomes. Ask yourself: If working at home is so easy and profitable, why isn't everyone doing it?
Identity Theft
THE Federal Trade Commission has named identity theft the fastest-growing white-collar crime today. Also called identity fraud, the crime occurs when thieves steal personal information with the intent to assume--or sell--another person's identity.
Thieves are after names, addresses, financial account numbers, Social Security numbers, dates and places of birth, tax records, cancelled checks and credit-card statements. They use these stolen identities to obtain credit from banks and retailers, steal money from existing accounts, apply for loans, establish accounts with utility companies, rent apartments, file bankruptcy, obtain jobs or apply for Social Security benefits.
Most identity-theft victims don't know thieves have made a mess of their good names and credit histories until banks deny them home loans or auto financing. For more information on identity theft, go to www.soldiersmagazine.com for Volume 4, No.2, of Hot Topics.
Internet Auctions
SOME online marketplaces promise merchandise at cheap prices but fail to deliver the items or send low-quality goods. Consumers should check out retail prices to see if prices are too good to be true, and check out the seller's reputation. While credit-card purchases can be disputed, be sure purchases made online are done on secure sites.
Investment and Financial Scares
FRAUDULENT investment promoters claim they can offer high returns and no-risk deals. But no financial investment is risk-free, and a high rate of return usually means greater risk.
Investment promoters feign high-level financial connections and pose as stock brokers or portfolio managers. They may create false statistics and offer share, mortgage or real estate investments; high-return schemes; option trading and foreign currency trading.
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