Most seen reports
Latest reviews (all sites)
Fraudulent website
ultimatebgcarreports.com sarinakyler@yahoo.com +332406476030
Date | 03/17/2020 |
---|---|
Fraudulent email | sarinakyler@yahoo.com |
Pseudonym | Sarina Kyler |
Url / Website | ultimatebgcarreports.com |
Telephone | +332406476030 |
Scam contents | It is a scam site, used by someone pretending to be interested in buying a car from an internet ad (Craigslist, etc.). The URL mentioned above was followed by "/". They say they want to buy the car, but ask you to provide a vehicle report before coming to see the car/close the transaction. They won't take information from CarFax, the BMV, or other legitimate VIN search firms--want you to use a particular site, such as the one above. They have various excuses for this, and try to make it sound like you (the seller) are being unreasonable. DON'T FALL FOR IT! They operate the site (or are in collusion with it), you pay for a "report", then more than likely, you never hear from them again. |
Comment / Review | I didn't actually go to the site above, thanks to a different site from another "buyer" showing up in a google search leading to this scam database. I got multiple contacts from an auto "for sale" listing I posted on Craigslist, FB, and FB Marketplace, that used the same scheme with different fraudulent websites. This particular "buyer" texted, then gave the email address to send the report to. I found a reddit thread that also describes this scam. Apparently it's quite common, using all kinds of plausible site names.
|
More info + | |
Related search(es) |
-
-
Group created on - 0 Members (manage members)
To view the contents of this private group or request to join it, you must create an account or login.
Reviews and comments left by Internet users are sorted in chronological order and are not checked a priori
up votedown vote
BruceL 03/17/2020 at 01:58 AM
EDIT to "Scam contents" section: the slash "/" was followed by some random characters which were somehow dropped from my post above. Remark: those characters were probably used to identify the "mark", or to route the report payment to the particular scammer.