;
  • Report:  #477859

Complaint Review: Booth Survey/Evaluator Consultant - Mountain View California

Reported By:
- Las Vegas, Nevada,
Submitted:
Updated:

Booth Survey/Evaluator Consultant
1347 Hill Dr Mountain View, 90041 California, U.S.A.
Phone:
888-300-8290
Web:
N/A
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
I answered an ad on Craigs List: Customer Service. A few day's latter I received a check by UPS courier of the amount of $4000.. The heading of the check(not a cashiers) read: Investment Trade Club of Chicago. That I, know exist. There were no instructions in the envelope with the check. But, I got an email telling me where to send some money to(a person) and, some to Money Gram. This through up the red flag. I don't know if it is a scam but, it has all the potential. Has anyone else dealt with cool2booth. His name(Hiring Director) is supposed to be Colin Booth. I know there are true Mystery Shops all over.

Victoria

Las Vegas, Nevada

U.S.A.


4 Updates & Rebuttals

ReactorCore

Victoria,
British Columbia,
Canada
Big time scam... Do not walk, RUN away...

#2Consumer Suggestion

Mon, August 10, 2009

And report the jerks too while you're at it. This is the same scam as reported in Rip Off report #473421 it's the same scam, just in a different wrapper. Here's what I told the poster of that report: Scammers are using unsolicited email 'job offers' to trick recipients into falling for payment transfer scams. The victim is promised a percentage of the payments transferred. However, the scheme is usually a method of 'laundering' stolen money and victims may be unwittingly participating in illegal activities. Bogus 'job offers' like the one mentioned above are becoming increasingly more common. These 'job offer' emails usually ask recipients to accept cash or cheque payments into their bank accounts and then wire-transfer the payment to the 'company' running the scam. The victim is instructed to keep a specified percentage of the transferred funds as payment. Typically, the scammers claim that there is some impediment, such as slow processing or currency conversion problems, which stops them from accepting overseas payments in their country. Therefore, they claim, they need an overseas 'agent' who can accept payments and then forward these payments back to them in an acceptable format such as a wire transfer. However, the real purpose of such schemes is generally to 'launder' stolen funds by making it difficult for law enforcement agencies to follow the money trail. Money stolen from bank accounts, proceeds from online fraud, and payments for nonexistent items sold on eBay may end up in the agent's account for 'sanitation'. For example, the criminal may transfer funds from a bank account recently compromised by a phishing attack into the 'agent's' personal account. The agent will then subtract his or her percentage and wire the remaining stolen money overseas to the criminal. Thus, the money trail may lead police directly to the agent. Meanwhile, the criminal has been able to collect the stolen funds unhindered and can simply disappear if things get hot. On the other hand, the hapless agent is now an accessory to serious criminal activity and may ultimately be charged accordingly. Effectively, the agent becomes a 'mule' to be used at will by the criminals responsible. In some cases, the agent may be asked to 're-ship' stolen goods and equipment as well as transfer payments. The agent may become more and more embroiled in the shady world of international cyber crime until he or she realizes what is happening or is left 'holding the bundle' when the police arrive. Acting on what looks like a good opportunity may ultimately become an enduring nightmare for the victim. He or she may end up losing integrity and personal funds, and have to face very serious legal consequences. Sadly, there are plenty of recipients naive enough to take these offers as genuine and apply for the 'job'. At face value, it may seem like an easy and legitimate way of making extra money . The criminals may directly target potential victims by responding to 'work wanted' ads or resumes posted online. In other cases, they may randomly distribute thousands of 'job offer' emails in the hope of netting just a few people foolish enough to take the bait. Job scam spam takes many forms. While some such emails may be fairly easily identified by poor spelling and grammar and far-fetched cover stories, others may be quite sophisticated and even include seemingly official logos and company information. Regardless of how believable a job offer may seem, recipients should keep the following points in mind: * Any company or organization that expects you to accept payments into a personal account and then forward it elsewhere should be treated with the utmost suspicion. * No legitimate company is ever likely to employ someone to handle money transfers, sight unseen, via an unsolicited email. Employees that handle large sums of the company's money are sure to be well vetted beforehand and well-qualified for the tasks involved. * Funds transfers might be part of a legitimate job, but such transfers would always use the company's own bank accounts, not the employee's personal account. * No legitimate company is going to 'pay' an employee by allowing him or her to keep a percentage of funds to be transferred. * In a progressively global economy, there are many ways for a company to accept overseas payments. Any claim that a company needs an individual to handle such payments via a personal bank account is likely to be bogus. All unsolicited job offers that arrive via email should be treated with extreme caution. Do not reply to such emails or provide any personal information to their senders. Aside from the money-laundering ruse, scammers may also use job offer emails to trick victims into revealing sensitive personal information. Over repeated emails, the scammer may gain enough information to steal the victim's identity. The scammers may also trick victims into paying upfront fees for bogus 'training' or 'job manuals' or trick them into transferring their own funds while waiting for a stolen cheque to clear. The best thing to do with such job offer emails is to simply hit the 'Delete' key.


ReactorCore

Victoria,
British Columbia,
Canada
Big time scam... Do not walk, RUN away...

#3Consumer Suggestion

Mon, August 10, 2009

And report the jerks too while you're at it. This is the same scam as reported in Rip Off report #473421 it's the same scam, just in a different wrapper. Here's what I told the poster of that report: Scammers are using unsolicited email 'job offers' to trick recipients into falling for payment transfer scams. The victim is promised a percentage of the payments transferred. However, the scheme is usually a method of 'laundering' stolen money and victims may be unwittingly participating in illegal activities. Bogus 'job offers' like the one mentioned above are becoming increasingly more common. These 'job offer' emails usually ask recipients to accept cash or cheque payments into their bank accounts and then wire-transfer the payment to the 'company' running the scam. The victim is instructed to keep a specified percentage of the transferred funds as payment. Typically, the scammers claim that there is some impediment, such as slow processing or currency conversion problems, which stops them from accepting overseas payments in their country. Therefore, they claim, they need an overseas 'agent' who can accept payments and then forward these payments back to them in an acceptable format such as a wire transfer. However, the real purpose of such schemes is generally to 'launder' stolen funds by making it difficult for law enforcement agencies to follow the money trail. Money stolen from bank accounts, proceeds from online fraud, and payments for nonexistent items sold on eBay may end up in the agent's account for 'sanitation'. For example, the criminal may transfer funds from a bank account recently compromised by a phishing attack into the 'agent's' personal account. The agent will then subtract his or her percentage and wire the remaining stolen money overseas to the criminal. Thus, the money trail may lead police directly to the agent. Meanwhile, the criminal has been able to collect the stolen funds unhindered and can simply disappear if things get hot. On the other hand, the hapless agent is now an accessory to serious criminal activity and may ultimately be charged accordingly. Effectively, the agent becomes a 'mule' to be used at will by the criminals responsible. In some cases, the agent may be asked to 're-ship' stolen goods and equipment as well as transfer payments. The agent may become more and more embroiled in the shady world of international cyber crime until he or she realizes what is happening or is left 'holding the bundle' when the police arrive. Acting on what looks like a good opportunity may ultimately become an enduring nightmare for the victim. He or she may end up losing integrity and personal funds, and have to face very serious legal consequences. Sadly, there are plenty of recipients naive enough to take these offers as genuine and apply for the 'job'. At face value, it may seem like an easy and legitimate way of making extra money . The criminals may directly target potential victims by responding to 'work wanted' ads or resumes posted online. In other cases, they may randomly distribute thousands of 'job offer' emails in the hope of netting just a few people foolish enough to take the bait. Job scam spam takes many forms. While some such emails may be fairly easily identified by poor spelling and grammar and far-fetched cover stories, others may be quite sophisticated and even include seemingly official logos and company information. Regardless of how believable a job offer may seem, recipients should keep the following points in mind: * Any company or organization that expects you to accept payments into a personal account and then forward it elsewhere should be treated with the utmost suspicion. * No legitimate company is ever likely to employ someone to handle money transfers, sight unseen, via an unsolicited email. Employees that handle large sums of the company's money are sure to be well vetted beforehand and well-qualified for the tasks involved. * Funds transfers might be part of a legitimate job, but such transfers would always use the company's own bank accounts, not the employee's personal account. * No legitimate company is going to 'pay' an employee by allowing him or her to keep a percentage of funds to be transferred. * In a progressively global economy, there are many ways for a company to accept overseas payments. Any claim that a company needs an individual to handle such payments via a personal bank account is likely to be bogus. All unsolicited job offers that arrive via email should be treated with extreme caution. Do not reply to such emails or provide any personal information to their senders. Aside from the money-laundering ruse, scammers may also use job offer emails to trick victims into revealing sensitive personal information. Over repeated emails, the scammer may gain enough information to steal the victim's identity. The scammers may also trick victims into paying upfront fees for bogus 'training' or 'job manuals' or trick them into transferring their own funds while waiting for a stolen cheque to clear. The best thing to do with such job offer emails is to simply hit the 'Delete' key.


ReactorCore

Victoria,
British Columbia,
Canada
Big time scam... Do not walk, RUN away...

#4Consumer Suggestion

Mon, August 10, 2009

And report the jerks too while you're at it. This is the same scam as reported in Rip Off report #473421 it's the same scam, just in a different wrapper. Here's what I told the poster of that report: Scammers are using unsolicited email 'job offers' to trick recipients into falling for payment transfer scams. The victim is promised a percentage of the payments transferred. However, the scheme is usually a method of 'laundering' stolen money and victims may be unwittingly participating in illegal activities. Bogus 'job offers' like the one mentioned above are becoming increasingly more common. These 'job offer' emails usually ask recipients to accept cash or cheque payments into their bank accounts and then wire-transfer the payment to the 'company' running the scam. The victim is instructed to keep a specified percentage of the transferred funds as payment. Typically, the scammers claim that there is some impediment, such as slow processing or currency conversion problems, which stops them from accepting overseas payments in their country. Therefore, they claim, they need an overseas 'agent' who can accept payments and then forward these payments back to them in an acceptable format such as a wire transfer. However, the real purpose of such schemes is generally to 'launder' stolen funds by making it difficult for law enforcement agencies to follow the money trail. Money stolen from bank accounts, proceeds from online fraud, and payments for nonexistent items sold on eBay may end up in the agent's account for 'sanitation'. For example, the criminal may transfer funds from a bank account recently compromised by a phishing attack into the 'agent's' personal account. The agent will then subtract his or her percentage and wire the remaining stolen money overseas to the criminal. Thus, the money trail may lead police directly to the agent. Meanwhile, the criminal has been able to collect the stolen funds unhindered and can simply disappear if things get hot. On the other hand, the hapless agent is now an accessory to serious criminal activity and may ultimately be charged accordingly. Effectively, the agent becomes a 'mule' to be used at will by the criminals responsible. In some cases, the agent may be asked to 're-ship' stolen goods and equipment as well as transfer payments. The agent may become more and more embroiled in the shady world of international cyber crime until he or she realizes what is happening or is left 'holding the bundle' when the police arrive. Acting on what looks like a good opportunity may ultimately become an enduring nightmare for the victim. He or she may end up losing integrity and personal funds, and have to face very serious legal consequences. Sadly, there are plenty of recipients naive enough to take these offers as genuine and apply for the 'job'. At face value, it may seem like an easy and legitimate way of making extra money . The criminals may directly target potential victims by responding to 'work wanted' ads or resumes posted online. In other cases, they may randomly distribute thousands of 'job offer' emails in the hope of netting just a few people foolish enough to take the bait. Job scam spam takes many forms. While some such emails may be fairly easily identified by poor spelling and grammar and far-fetched cover stories, others may be quite sophisticated and even include seemingly official logos and company information. Regardless of how believable a job offer may seem, recipients should keep the following points in mind: * Any company or organization that expects you to accept payments into a personal account and then forward it elsewhere should be treated with the utmost suspicion. * No legitimate company is ever likely to employ someone to handle money transfers, sight unseen, via an unsolicited email. Employees that handle large sums of the company's money are sure to be well vetted beforehand and well-qualified for the tasks involved. * Funds transfers might be part of a legitimate job, but such transfers would always use the company's own bank accounts, not the employee's personal account. * No legitimate company is going to 'pay' an employee by allowing him or her to keep a percentage of funds to be transferred. * In a progressively global economy, there are many ways for a company to accept overseas payments. Any claim that a company needs an individual to handle such payments via a personal bank account is likely to be bogus. All unsolicited job offers that arrive via email should be treated with extreme caution. Do not reply to such emails or provide any personal information to their senders. Aside from the money-laundering ruse, scammers may also use job offer emails to trick victims into revealing sensitive personal information. Over repeated emails, the scammer may gain enough information to steal the victim's identity. The scammers may also trick victims into paying upfront fees for bogus 'training' or 'job manuals' or trick them into transferring their own funds while waiting for a stolen cheque to clear. The best thing to do with such job offer emails is to simply hit the 'Delete' key.


Nancy

Steilacoom,
Washington,
U.S.A.
SCAM SCAM SCAM

#5Consumer Suggestion

Sun, August 09, 2009

OF course it is a SCAM.

Reports & Rebuttal
Respond to this report!
Also a victim?
Repair Your Reputation!
//