Fast forward to two weeks ago. We come back from Christmas break, power up the computer, and nothing happens. I crack open the computer, clean out the slightly less than enormous amount of dust, and fiddle with the memory. Unfortunately, I discover that one of our memory slots is shot, meaning that instead of our normal 1 gig of memory we could only operate with 512 MB. In other words, our computer became really, really slow.
I quickly began shopping for a new computer and since I use a Mac at school, thought about switching at home as well. As part of my searching, I went on craigslist and found the following amazing deal:
2 Month Old iMac for sale running 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3 Processor, 4 GB Memory. $610.
Snow Leopard 10.6.4 Respond to post with any further questions regarding this computer!
I read the post and thought to myself, "Too good to be true," but followed up anyway, sending the seller the following message:
Hi,
I was wondering if you still had the iMac for sale.
thanks,
The next day, I received back this message:
Hi, I am getting back to you regarding the 21.5-inch iMac from Craigslist
My name is Arianna and I am now in Wolverhampton, United Kingdom.
I am selling the iMac for $600 USD. I have attached some pics with it to this email.
The iMac is still available and I hope you are still interested. The iMac was bought brand new from Apple a couple of months ago.
About the iMac I can say it's in perfect shape, as I used it only for a few weeks. Included in the $600 price is everything that came with the iMac.
The iMac is here with me.
I tried to be as thorough as I could with the presentation so you can have all the info if you decide to go ahead and buy it.
Please get back to me and let me know if you like the iMac if you're really interested in buying it.
Thanks,
Arianna
Chief Logistic Officer
www.bluechipremovals.co.uk
She even included pictures of an iMac like this one:
Needless to say, a red flag went up when a transaction that was supposed to be local suddenly went global. I decided to play a bit and see where this went, so followed up with this message:
Arianna,
Thanks for the e-mail. Two quick questions. First, why are you selling the computer and second, why did you advertise in Kansas City? How would you get the computer here?
Thanks,
Now the story gets really interesting. Since most people won't just send money overseas without having the object purchased in hand, "Arianna" responded with this option:
Hi,
I posted the ad there because I live there. But now I have been relocated here with my work.
I am selling the imac in the US because the warranty is good only there. Because of that, nobody wants it here for this price.
I found a way to sell you the imac that will cover the both of us. It's a worldwide delivery company called TNT. They have a service that will allow you to test the imac before I receive my payment.
Please go to the TNT website below and read their procedure so we can be on the same page:
http://ukservices-tnt.com/tnt.express.wolverhampton.depot. overseas.transactions/
I will pay the TNT shipping fee and I can use 2 day delivery if you are in a hurry.
Thanks.
Arianna Emmert
Chief Logistic Officer
Hmmmm. I followed the link and it was extremely well put together, and actually looked like the real TNT website. But look through the two sites and you can begin to see small differences. I sent a note to TNT's fraud department and then did a few searches for "Arianna." Seems like she moves a lot, has had several last names, and tries to scam people on craigslist regularly. So I thought I'd see how long I could string her along and replied with the following message:
Arianna,
I'm in no hurry and I need to talk to my wife about the computer today. I'll get back to you.
By the way, where did you live in Kansas City? In the city proper or in one of the suburbs? Find some favorite BBQ while you were here?
She must have realized I was on to her because no messages since then. But hopefully my posting this little saga will help someone else out who encounters "Arianna."
7 comments:
Tired of all the scams on Craigslist?
Let http://www.ScamTex.com/ step in and investigate the postings for you.
We will prevent you from being a victim of a scam or fraudulent posting.
Would you stand on the street corner and hand out your E-mail address or other personal info to a stranger? Then why do it online?
Unlike the clown above me, I'm not trying to sell anything. I've you've been scammed (or almost scammed) by "Arianna" you CAN fight back. It's called scam baiting and it's a form of internet vigilantism. I troll craigslist for about 20 minutes a day and sniff out the fake/fraudulent ads, reply to them, and then shut their fake websites down when they reply. Join me and together we can all battle scamming on craigslist. Email me for details, clscambaiter@gmail.com
I promise I'm not selling or advertising anything.
-Craigslist Scam Baiter
BEWARE!!!
SAME SCAM IS UP AGAIN IN CRAIGSLIST!!!
http://philadelphia.craigslist.org/sys/2947487089.html
I emailed the seller and got the following response:
"Hi, I am getting back to you regarding the 27-inch iMac from Craigslist
My name is Emily and I am now in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
The iMac is still available and I hope you are still interested.
I am selling the iMac for $600 USD. I have attached some pics with it to this email.
It's 3.10 GHZ i5, has 16 GB of RAM, 2 GB of Video Memory, 2 TB of storage and another 256 GB SSD so it can boot faster.
The iMac was bought brand new from Apple a couple of months ago.
About the iMac I can say it's in perfect shape, as I used it only for a few weeks. Included in the $600 price is everything that came with the iMac and also the warranty papers.
I tried to be as thorough as I could with the presentation so you can have all the info if you decide to go ahead and buy it. So what do you think? Do you want my imac?
Thanks,
Emily"
BEWARE!!!
Thanks! I encountered the exact same scam, only the name was "Jessica McGee" from Vancouver, BC Canada. I googled "craigslist imac scam" and found your post.
I did a search as well and it brought me here. she attached the same image, but added a few more that showed up on other fraud sites. time to bait her!
Her name is Jessica Snyders yes Snyders not Snyder lol she's in Vancouver using a Canada college email
Still there, though her name is now Jessica Nethersole. This is the exact same ad, however.
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