Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Frauds and Scams (SCAM)     

axdpc - 20 Sep 2003 15:08

Reports of frauds, deceptions and scams keep appearing, weekly even daily, on
major news channels and newspapers. Some of these frauds seem just too big and remote to be of immediate, direct relevance to our daily lives. But, we will eventually pay for the consequences and damages, in taxes, costs of goods and services, regulations, copy-cats etc.

I hope we can collect, in one thread, frauds and scams, reported or heard. We must become more aware and more educated to guard against frauds and scams
which impact upon the health, well being, and wealth of ourselves and our families.

Bolshi - 03 Nov 2006 08:43 - 293 of 631

From front page of Indy
Pollock's 'No. 5, 1948' commands record price for a painting
One of the largest paintings troubled artist Jackson Pollock completed - the unromantically entitled No. 5, 1948 - has been sold for no less a sum than 73.35m

It's a joke innit? If I knew how to post a jpeg here I could show you.

Looks like a load of elastic bands to me. They are wondering if he is the world's greatest painter.

maddoctor - 03 Nov 2006 09:01 - 294 of 631

anybody know anything about " GLOBAL SECURITES" they keep cold calling me and really p*ssing me off!

DocProc - 03 Nov 2006 09:41 - 295 of 631

"To an untrained eye it looks like someone tied paintfilled brushes to the tails of a couple of cats and then let them fight it out on a 4ft x 8ft canvas.

However, this mass of brown and blue daubs criss-crossed with red and yellow swirls is a right load of old Pollocks and worth 73 .5 million."

I might have a go myself. It sounds like a doddle.

Bolshi - 03 Nov 2006 09:48 - 296 of 631

Doc. Sounds like a doddle and looks like a doodle? :-)

DocProc - 03 Nov 2006 09:58 - 297 of 631

:-)

Bolshi - 03 Nov 2006 10:05 - 298 of 631

And if I tied my paint brush to my willy, would it be a cock-a doodle?

OK, OK. I'll stop now.

DocProc - 03 Nov 2006 10:06 - 299 of 631

You can tell whether a man is honest or not because of the presence (or absence)of a nice smile.

Anyone on here doing any investing in the products of the following guys?

http://www.fasttrackuk.com/

Bolshi - 03 Nov 2006 10:09 - 300 of 631

Just for you Doc - :-)

Bolshi - 03 Nov 2006 10:12 - 301 of 631

Ref Fasttrack. There's an article in IC this morning about a guy losing 10K within 2 weeks with Blue Index (advisory) Fees of 5150. Ouch!

Andy - 04 Nov 2006 10:08 - 302 of 631

Doc,

I thought they were doing one of those toothpaste ads!

hp_photo_02.jpg

axdpc - 17 Nov 2006 14:10 - 303 of 631

The great free range egg fraud - they came from battery hens

"Millions of shoppers are being cheated as a result of widespread fraud involving free range eggs.

Up to 30 million battery-farmed eggs have been sold in shops and supermarkets across the UK under the free range label.

And as free range eggs are more expensive than others, unscrupulous dealers can sell wrongly labelled boxes at marked-up prices.

Government officials believe they have unearthed evidence of serious corruption among farmers and egg dealers, and the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has launched an investigation into the industry.

..."

DocProc - 17 Nov 2006 14:42 - 304 of 631

It looks like this is is being done by merely one unscrupulous egg dealer importing poor quality eggs from the continent.

Other than both my wife and myself and lots of others up and down the country getting a dose of diahorrea from our so-called Free Range eggs, two other unfortunate outcomes have resulted.....

From http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2457302,00.html

Shortage of free-range eggs encouraged scam
By Valerie Elliott, Consumer Editor

A SHORTAGE of free-range eggs in Britain is believed to have encouraged the suspected scam revealed by The Times yesterday in passing off produce from factory farms as the welfare-friendly egg.

Chickens have been affected by the hot weather in the summer and autumn and they have laid fewer eggs.

The demand for free-range eggs is also growing by 10 per cent a year but farmers say that they cannot afford the necessary investment to expand their businesses.

In two weeks, therefore, Somerfield will be the first supermarket in the country to switch to selling French free-range eggs. Iceland and Tesco are also understood to be lining up suppliers on the Continent if they are not able to guarantee supplies at home. Other supermarkets are also worrying about what to do. Somerfield is insisting that the French free-range eggs will be produced to strict European welfare and safety standards and will also come from flocks that have been vaccinated against salmonella.

John Widdowson, a free-range egg farmer from Devon, expressed his anger at the use of French egg suppliers: Obviously, if it was proved correct yes, we are outraged it is just totally unacceptable.

Many farmers wish to expand their free-range operations but have been held up as they wait for planning permission, and newcomers are being put off by the high level of cash investment needed.

The cost of opening a free-range unit can be as much as 500,000.

axdpc - 20 Nov 2006 09:34 - 305 of 631

Nigeria scams cost UK billions

"Financial crime in the UK stemming from Nigeria involves "billions of pounds" but not enough is being done to stop it, a report has concluded.

Internet scams, credit card fraud and money laundering are going unchecked by governments in both countries, research group Chatham House says.

The crimes are not given priority but have become a "large and pressing problem", the author says.

Nigeria has become especially linked with "advance fee" or "419 scams".

...

"The scale and scope of Nigeria-related financial crime highlights critical wider failures in the way the British authorities tackle fraud, corruption and money laundering," he said.

"Despite important, but limited reforms, criminal networks and corporate bribery still flourish.

"This raises questions about how sincere the governments in both countries are in their talk of change, particularly when significant political, commercial or energy interests are at stake."

...


axdpc - 21 Nov 2006 09:43 - 306 of 631

Fairpak ...

Xmas terror for 300,000 UK families.
Could it be another case of game keeper turn poacher?
Perhaps the new ID card will help??

Above the law but below contempt.




axdpc - 21 Nov 2006 09:52 - 307 of 631

Christmas is cancelled: 300,000 families may have lost savings in Farepak crash

"
Total losses 'probably double official estimates'
Firm kept no record of customer names

Customers of the collapsed Christmas savings company Farepak could have lost up to 120m, MPs claimed last night

..."

axdpc - 21 Nov 2006 10:51 - 308 of 631

Britain branded 'card fraud capital'

"Tuesday November 21, 08:12 AM

Card fraud has affected more than seven million people in the UK, figures show.

Research from the European Security Transport Association (Esta) found that nearly 20 per cent of the adult population in Great Britain had been targeted as part of a credit or debit card scam.

It makes the UK the card fraud capital of Europe, with citizens almost twice at risk of becoming a victim compared to adults in seven other European countries polled as part of the survey.

Mike Bowen, spokesman for Esta, said: "It is incredible how many people across Britain have fallen victim to card fraudsters and unsurprising that so many victims favour a return to cash."

A separate study by the European Commission found that almost a third of card fraud victims are never reimbursed for their loss by their card provider, despite claims to the contrary by banks.

..."



WHY? Where are the leakages of confidential data ???

Sputnik - 21 Nov 2006 11:58 - 309 of 631

Recieved this today



Can you circulate this around especially as Christmas is fast approaching - it has been confirmed by Royal Mail. The Trading Standards Office are making people aware of the following scam:A card is posted through your door from a company called PDS (Parcel Delivery Service) suggesting that they were unable to deliver a parcel and that you need to contact them on 0906 6611911 a premium rate number). DO NOT call this number, as this is a mail scam originating from Belize. If you call the number and you start to hear a recorded message you will already have been billed 15 for the phone call.
If you do receive a card with these details, then please contact Royal
Mail Fraud on 020 7239 6655 or ICSTIS (the premium rate service regulator)
at www.icstis.org.uk
W12 9NX

little woman - 21 Nov 2006 12:01 - 310 of 631

I had my credit card account raided through my paypal account at the earlier this month.

Fortuneately for me paypal, froze my account after the 4th identical transaction (each one for EUR106). I deleted the e-mail telling me my account had been compremised thinking it was a fake (like I delete the 10+ simular e-mails I get every day!), so it was not until I got my credit card statement I found out - This was last Friday. I reported it to the credit card (for once they allowed me to do it over the phone, and the card was "stopped". Told them not to issue a new one, as once this is sorted - the card will be cancelled - I need to reduce the number of C/C I have.

Reported it to paypal, and by Sunday they agreed to refund my account and refund my credit card. I am now going through the labourious process of reinstating my paypal account....... I think it will be a couple of weeks before it is reinstated....

Kayak - 21 Nov 2006 12:05 - 311 of 631

See post 290 above Sputnik :-) It's of course a very old and out of date email still being spread by well-meaning people, although the principle is still valid.

ThePublisher - 21 Nov 2006 13:54 - 312 of 631

" Total losses 'probably double official estimates'
Firm kept no record of customer names "

To me one of the most blatant cases of Fraud for a long time.

At times like this you regret the recent practice of allowing company directors to put their office, instead of home, address in filed accounts.

TP
Register now or login to post to this thread.