I believe this to be fraud — hired, then asked to cash check and send cash as Bitcoin
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I have been "hired" by Nissan Motor as a key account specialist.
My first assignment is to cash two checks that I have received. Both were written by a customer who has already received the engines. The total is $2500. I am to cash the checks, get the money, take out my bonus and any other related expenses and deposit into a Bitcoin ATM. Then make copy of receipt and electronically send to my "manager".
I contacted a lawyer, was told to talk to the Department of Labor, who said they will not get involved, as this is between me and my employer. Any advice?
scams fraud bitcoin money-laundering
|
show 15 more comments
I have been "hired" by Nissan Motor as a key account specialist.
My first assignment is to cash two checks that I have received. Both were written by a customer who has already received the engines. The total is $2500. I am to cash the checks, get the money, take out my bonus and any other related expenses and deposit into a Bitcoin ATM. Then make copy of receipt and electronically send to my "manager".
I contacted a lawyer, was told to talk to the Department of Labor, who said they will not get involved, as this is between me and my employer. Any advice?
scams fraud bitcoin money-laundering
104
Yes that's a fraud. Go to the police. The checks are fake.
– Ben Voigt
Mar 28 at 16:15
22
How exactly did you get hired for this? Were you contacted out of the blue, or did you find a job ad that you applied to?
– Tas
Mar 28 at 21:46
13
What is your employment contract? Who have signed it, where have your signed it? Did you met the person that have signed it in the person?
– 9ilsdx 9rvj 0lo
Mar 29 at 7:25
7
"I've been hired by Nissan" - No, you were not.
– MonkeyZeus
Mar 29 at 17:54
8
If you gave them any personal, sensitive information then Identity Fraud is next (SSN, DL number, address, etc, etc.)
– JPhi1618
Mar 29 at 19:10
|
show 15 more comments
I have been "hired" by Nissan Motor as a key account specialist.
My first assignment is to cash two checks that I have received. Both were written by a customer who has already received the engines. The total is $2500. I am to cash the checks, get the money, take out my bonus and any other related expenses and deposit into a Bitcoin ATM. Then make copy of receipt and electronically send to my "manager".
I contacted a lawyer, was told to talk to the Department of Labor, who said they will not get involved, as this is between me and my employer. Any advice?
scams fraud bitcoin money-laundering
I have been "hired" by Nissan Motor as a key account specialist.
My first assignment is to cash two checks that I have received. Both were written by a customer who has already received the engines. The total is $2500. I am to cash the checks, get the money, take out my bonus and any other related expenses and deposit into a Bitcoin ATM. Then make copy of receipt and electronically send to my "manager".
I contacted a lawyer, was told to talk to the Department of Labor, who said they will not get involved, as this is between me and my employer. Any advice?
scams fraud bitcoin money-laundering
scams fraud bitcoin money-laundering
edited Mar 31 at 12:28
Rodrigo de Azevedo
450517
450517
asked Mar 28 at 16:06
john balintjohn balint
227123
227123
104
Yes that's a fraud. Go to the police. The checks are fake.
– Ben Voigt
Mar 28 at 16:15
22
How exactly did you get hired for this? Were you contacted out of the blue, or did you find a job ad that you applied to?
– Tas
Mar 28 at 21:46
13
What is your employment contract? Who have signed it, where have your signed it? Did you met the person that have signed it in the person?
– 9ilsdx 9rvj 0lo
Mar 29 at 7:25
7
"I've been hired by Nissan" - No, you were not.
– MonkeyZeus
Mar 29 at 17:54
8
If you gave them any personal, sensitive information then Identity Fraud is next (SSN, DL number, address, etc, etc.)
– JPhi1618
Mar 29 at 19:10
|
show 15 more comments
104
Yes that's a fraud. Go to the police. The checks are fake.
– Ben Voigt
Mar 28 at 16:15
22
How exactly did you get hired for this? Were you contacted out of the blue, or did you find a job ad that you applied to?
– Tas
Mar 28 at 21:46
13
What is your employment contract? Who have signed it, where have your signed it? Did you met the person that have signed it in the person?
– 9ilsdx 9rvj 0lo
Mar 29 at 7:25
7
"I've been hired by Nissan" - No, you were not.
– MonkeyZeus
Mar 29 at 17:54
8
If you gave them any personal, sensitive information then Identity Fraud is next (SSN, DL number, address, etc, etc.)
– JPhi1618
Mar 29 at 19:10
104
104
Yes that's a fraud. Go to the police. The checks are fake.
– Ben Voigt
Mar 28 at 16:15
Yes that's a fraud. Go to the police. The checks are fake.
– Ben Voigt
Mar 28 at 16:15
22
22
How exactly did you get hired for this? Were you contacted out of the blue, or did you find a job ad that you applied to?
– Tas
Mar 28 at 21:46
How exactly did you get hired for this? Were you contacted out of the blue, or did you find a job ad that you applied to?
– Tas
Mar 28 at 21:46
13
13
What is your employment contract? Who have signed it, where have your signed it? Did you met the person that have signed it in the person?
– 9ilsdx 9rvj 0lo
Mar 29 at 7:25
What is your employment contract? Who have signed it, where have your signed it? Did you met the person that have signed it in the person?
– 9ilsdx 9rvj 0lo
Mar 29 at 7:25
7
7
"I've been hired by Nissan" - No, you were not.
– MonkeyZeus
Mar 29 at 17:54
"I've been hired by Nissan" - No, you were not.
– MonkeyZeus
Mar 29 at 17:54
8
8
If you gave them any personal, sensitive information then Identity Fraud is next (SSN, DL number, address, etc, etc.)
– JPhi1618
Mar 29 at 19:10
If you gave them any personal, sensitive information then Identity Fraud is next (SSN, DL number, address, etc, etc.)
– JPhi1618
Mar 29 at 19:10
|
show 15 more comments
9 Answers
9
active
oldest
votes
Absolutely a scam 100% chance. This is one of the most common scams out there.
Here's how you will get ripped off.
- They send you a check which will deposit in your account
- Seeing the deposit went through everything looks peachy, you buy and transmit bitcoins.
- The check bounces in a few weeks and you are out the money or owe the bank if that gives you a negative balance.
- The person you sent the bitcoin to is long gone and you have no way to reverse or dispute the transfer.
- If by some miracle they actually let you keep some of the money (the check is real), congrats you just committed a felony and have set yourself as the only accomplice the FBI is likely to be able to track down and arrest.
To avoid scams in the future always ask yourself one question. Why would a company pay someone, a complete stranger, to do virtually no work? If you can't understand their angle then there is no way it is legit. Don't let greed cloud your vision.
The added fact that they want you to send the money via an anonymous and irrevocable mechanism SCREAMS scam. No legitimate business is going to use bitcoin for transferring money for any number of reasons.
Fake Check Scam
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
add a comment |
Yes, it’s a scam. There are red flags all over it. Ask yourself whether you really think a huge multinational like Nissan would work in this way.
add a comment |
I contacted a lawyer, told to talk to Dept of Labor, DOL said they will not get involved that this is between my and my employer. Advise?
What employer? You are 100% not employed by Nissan Motors....
8
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
6
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
add a comment |
What bank account are you supposed to cash the check into?
My guess is "yours", and that's a complete and utter proof of scam. There is absolutely and categorically no way that a reputable company like Nissan would have checks cashed into anything except a business account of Nissan's.
It would be illegal and stupid to do so, and no legitimate company would ask a person to bank money into anything except an account of that business.
5
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
1
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
2
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
add a comment |
It's not really Nissan.
- The bank will put a hold on all but $100 of the check amount.
- After a few days, they will release the money, conditional on you making the money good if the check later bounces (read your bank agreement).
- You will go "haha, check cleared, money in the bank!"
- You will send the money onward via Bitcoin, which is irreversible.
- The check will later bounce.
- The bank will require you to make the money good Right Now, as agreed.
- Optional: You are unable. ChexSystems blacklist. No banking for you for 7 years.
Scammer has your money, you are left holding the bag.
Money gets used for terror, human trafficking and other crime.
This works because scammers are really good at creating checks with routing information designed to make the check bounce around the international banking system for many weeks before being definitively declared a fake. Normal checks bounce or clear in just a few days, which is why the bank sets such a short time to releasing the money.
6
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
add a comment |
100% Scam
They want you to cash a check, which is a transaction that can be reversed such as if the check bounces.
Then give them money in bitcoin, which cant be reversed.
Most likely the check will bounce but you will already have given them the bitcoins and the bank will expect you to pay back that money you gave them while you will have no way of getting your money back.
add a comment |
Just to add some relevant information to the previous answers:
There are plenty of other ways the scam can work. It's possible that the check doesn't bounce - in such a case the source of the check is almost certainly illegally obtained funds, and what they are asking you to do is money laundering. Money laundering is a crime. Not knowing the law doesn't make it legal to break the law, so if the check doesn't bounce you're in even worse trouble.
Go to the police.
add a comment |
A scam beyond doubt.
- Companies pay you with a check or direct deposit, after deducting taxes, they do not have you take your salary and bonus out of a check that you have cashed.
- Companies do not have you take salary, expenses or bonuses out of a check you are depositing. Companies go to extraordinary lengths to clearly separate and document expenditures and income, to the extent that in some cases it cost them more to make a payment than the payment is actually worth. They do this so their books are clean and balanced which is worth the minor cost associated with doing so. I have personally received checks that were for amounts less than the cost of the stamp.
- Hiring an employee or contracting with a firm to handle financial transactions are both fairly big deals. In the first case you would have gone to their offices, been interviewed by several people, met with HR, your co-workers and managers, signed paperwork and did a lot of things I’m sure you didn’t do...as for contracting...Unless you are in the business of doing cash to bitcoin conversions, they would not approach you to do this. And if you were in the business of doing so, you would have your standard terms which they would either accept or attempt to negotiate.
- Nissan has a checking account somewhere, if they need funds deposited into their account, they will deposit the funds into their account.
- If instead of being an employee, you were an independent contractor, you would be paid either in advance or after invoicing them (depending upon your contract with them). But Nissan is a billion dollar business and isn’t going to contract with some nobody to do check clearance and bitcoin conversions.
- If Nissan needs bit coins for some reason, they aren’t going to get them in a way that involves paying fees to 2 independent middle men (in this case you and the atm operator).
add a comment |
If you want to read more about this, it is a minor twist on a standard "advance fee" or "Nigerian 419" scam, and is, unfortunately, not uncommon.
The scammers must be getting people to fall for it, or they wouldn't continue trying. Good on you for at least catching it before it cost you money.
3
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
add a comment |
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9 Answers
9
active
oldest
votes
9 Answers
9
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Absolutely a scam 100% chance. This is one of the most common scams out there.
Here's how you will get ripped off.
- They send you a check which will deposit in your account
- Seeing the deposit went through everything looks peachy, you buy and transmit bitcoins.
- The check bounces in a few weeks and you are out the money or owe the bank if that gives you a negative balance.
- The person you sent the bitcoin to is long gone and you have no way to reverse or dispute the transfer.
- If by some miracle they actually let you keep some of the money (the check is real), congrats you just committed a felony and have set yourself as the only accomplice the FBI is likely to be able to track down and arrest.
To avoid scams in the future always ask yourself one question. Why would a company pay someone, a complete stranger, to do virtually no work? If you can't understand their angle then there is no way it is legit. Don't let greed cloud your vision.
The added fact that they want you to send the money via an anonymous and irrevocable mechanism SCREAMS scam. No legitimate business is going to use bitcoin for transferring money for any number of reasons.
Fake Check Scam
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
add a comment |
Absolutely a scam 100% chance. This is one of the most common scams out there.
Here's how you will get ripped off.
- They send you a check which will deposit in your account
- Seeing the deposit went through everything looks peachy, you buy and transmit bitcoins.
- The check bounces in a few weeks and you are out the money or owe the bank if that gives you a negative balance.
- The person you sent the bitcoin to is long gone and you have no way to reverse or dispute the transfer.
- If by some miracle they actually let you keep some of the money (the check is real), congrats you just committed a felony and have set yourself as the only accomplice the FBI is likely to be able to track down and arrest.
To avoid scams in the future always ask yourself one question. Why would a company pay someone, a complete stranger, to do virtually no work? If you can't understand their angle then there is no way it is legit. Don't let greed cloud your vision.
The added fact that they want you to send the money via an anonymous and irrevocable mechanism SCREAMS scam. No legitimate business is going to use bitcoin for transferring money for any number of reasons.
Fake Check Scam
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
add a comment |
Absolutely a scam 100% chance. This is one of the most common scams out there.
Here's how you will get ripped off.
- They send you a check which will deposit in your account
- Seeing the deposit went through everything looks peachy, you buy and transmit bitcoins.
- The check bounces in a few weeks and you are out the money or owe the bank if that gives you a negative balance.
- The person you sent the bitcoin to is long gone and you have no way to reverse or dispute the transfer.
- If by some miracle they actually let you keep some of the money (the check is real), congrats you just committed a felony and have set yourself as the only accomplice the FBI is likely to be able to track down and arrest.
To avoid scams in the future always ask yourself one question. Why would a company pay someone, a complete stranger, to do virtually no work? If you can't understand their angle then there is no way it is legit. Don't let greed cloud your vision.
The added fact that they want you to send the money via an anonymous and irrevocable mechanism SCREAMS scam. No legitimate business is going to use bitcoin for transferring money for any number of reasons.
Fake Check Scam
Absolutely a scam 100% chance. This is one of the most common scams out there.
Here's how you will get ripped off.
- They send you a check which will deposit in your account
- Seeing the deposit went through everything looks peachy, you buy and transmit bitcoins.
- The check bounces in a few weeks and you are out the money or owe the bank if that gives you a negative balance.
- The person you sent the bitcoin to is long gone and you have no way to reverse or dispute the transfer.
- If by some miracle they actually let you keep some of the money (the check is real), congrats you just committed a felony and have set yourself as the only accomplice the FBI is likely to be able to track down and arrest.
To avoid scams in the future always ask yourself one question. Why would a company pay someone, a complete stranger, to do virtually no work? If you can't understand their angle then there is no way it is legit. Don't let greed cloud your vision.
The added fact that they want you to send the money via an anonymous and irrevocable mechanism SCREAMS scam. No legitimate business is going to use bitcoin for transferring money for any number of reasons.
Fake Check Scam
edited Mar 29 at 13:20
answered Mar 28 at 18:36
JohnFx♦JohnFx
35.8k985188
35.8k985188
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
add a comment |
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– JohnFx♦
Mar 31 at 20:52
add a comment |
Yes, it’s a scam. There are red flags all over it. Ask yourself whether you really think a huge multinational like Nissan would work in this way.
add a comment |
Yes, it’s a scam. There are red flags all over it. Ask yourself whether you really think a huge multinational like Nissan would work in this way.
add a comment |
Yes, it’s a scam. There are red flags all over it. Ask yourself whether you really think a huge multinational like Nissan would work in this way.
Yes, it’s a scam. There are red flags all over it. Ask yourself whether you really think a huge multinational like Nissan would work in this way.
answered Mar 28 at 16:31
VickyVicky
11.2k22544
11.2k22544
add a comment |
add a comment |
I contacted a lawyer, told to talk to Dept of Labor, DOL said they will not get involved that this is between my and my employer. Advise?
What employer? You are 100% not employed by Nissan Motors....
8
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
6
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
add a comment |
I contacted a lawyer, told to talk to Dept of Labor, DOL said they will not get involved that this is between my and my employer. Advise?
What employer? You are 100% not employed by Nissan Motors....
8
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
6
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
add a comment |
I contacted a lawyer, told to talk to Dept of Labor, DOL said they will not get involved that this is between my and my employer. Advise?
What employer? You are 100% not employed by Nissan Motors....
I contacted a lawyer, told to talk to Dept of Labor, DOL said they will not get involved that this is between my and my employer. Advise?
What employer? You are 100% not employed by Nissan Motors....
answered Mar 28 at 17:18
quidquid
39.2k875127
39.2k875127
8
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
6
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
add a comment |
8
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
6
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
8
8
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
'filthy rotten scammers co' is the employer.
– Dan Neely
Mar 28 at 21:09
6
6
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
DOL should have directed them to the police. I'm surprised they didn't.
– Glen Pierce
Mar 29 at 15:19
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
So should the lawyer, frankly.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 30 at 14:59
add a comment |
What bank account are you supposed to cash the check into?
My guess is "yours", and that's a complete and utter proof of scam. There is absolutely and categorically no way that a reputable company like Nissan would have checks cashed into anything except a business account of Nissan's.
It would be illegal and stupid to do so, and no legitimate company would ask a person to bank money into anything except an account of that business.
5
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
1
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
2
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
add a comment |
What bank account are you supposed to cash the check into?
My guess is "yours", and that's a complete and utter proof of scam. There is absolutely and categorically no way that a reputable company like Nissan would have checks cashed into anything except a business account of Nissan's.
It would be illegal and stupid to do so, and no legitimate company would ask a person to bank money into anything except an account of that business.
5
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
1
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
2
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
add a comment |
What bank account are you supposed to cash the check into?
My guess is "yours", and that's a complete and utter proof of scam. There is absolutely and categorically no way that a reputable company like Nissan would have checks cashed into anything except a business account of Nissan's.
It would be illegal and stupid to do so, and no legitimate company would ask a person to bank money into anything except an account of that business.
What bank account are you supposed to cash the check into?
My guess is "yours", and that's a complete and utter proof of scam. There is absolutely and categorically no way that a reputable company like Nissan would have checks cashed into anything except a business account of Nissan's.
It would be illegal and stupid to do so, and no legitimate company would ask a person to bank money into anything except an account of that business.
answered Mar 29 at 7:40
StilezStilez
1,601139
1,601139
5
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
1
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
2
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
add a comment |
5
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
1
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
2
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
5
5
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
Also, unless the OP was a registered financial institution, such things would be illegal even if the checks were legitimate.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 9:01
1
1
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
Already said that :)
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 13:01
2
2
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
I know, my point was that it's illegal even if it wasn't a scam (which it is) and even if the check was legit (which it isn't), because for such transactions a juridical entity is required, you are not allowed to provide such services with your personal bank account.
– vsz
Mar 29 at 14:04
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
Ah, illegal for the OP, as opposed to just illegal for the company. Fair point. Not sure how universal that is in different countries.
– Stilez
Mar 29 at 17:14
add a comment |
It's not really Nissan.
- The bank will put a hold on all but $100 of the check amount.
- After a few days, they will release the money, conditional on you making the money good if the check later bounces (read your bank agreement).
- You will go "haha, check cleared, money in the bank!"
- You will send the money onward via Bitcoin, which is irreversible.
- The check will later bounce.
- The bank will require you to make the money good Right Now, as agreed.
- Optional: You are unable. ChexSystems blacklist. No banking for you for 7 years.
Scammer has your money, you are left holding the bag.
Money gets used for terror, human trafficking and other crime.
This works because scammers are really good at creating checks with routing information designed to make the check bounce around the international banking system for many weeks before being definitively declared a fake. Normal checks bounce or clear in just a few days, which is why the bank sets such a short time to releasing the money.
6
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
add a comment |
It's not really Nissan.
- The bank will put a hold on all but $100 of the check amount.
- After a few days, they will release the money, conditional on you making the money good if the check later bounces (read your bank agreement).
- You will go "haha, check cleared, money in the bank!"
- You will send the money onward via Bitcoin, which is irreversible.
- The check will later bounce.
- The bank will require you to make the money good Right Now, as agreed.
- Optional: You are unable. ChexSystems blacklist. No banking for you for 7 years.
Scammer has your money, you are left holding the bag.
Money gets used for terror, human trafficking and other crime.
This works because scammers are really good at creating checks with routing information designed to make the check bounce around the international banking system for many weeks before being definitively declared a fake. Normal checks bounce or clear in just a few days, which is why the bank sets such a short time to releasing the money.
6
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
add a comment |
It's not really Nissan.
- The bank will put a hold on all but $100 of the check amount.
- After a few days, they will release the money, conditional on you making the money good if the check later bounces (read your bank agreement).
- You will go "haha, check cleared, money in the bank!"
- You will send the money onward via Bitcoin, which is irreversible.
- The check will later bounce.
- The bank will require you to make the money good Right Now, as agreed.
- Optional: You are unable. ChexSystems blacklist. No banking for you for 7 years.
Scammer has your money, you are left holding the bag.
Money gets used for terror, human trafficking and other crime.
This works because scammers are really good at creating checks with routing information designed to make the check bounce around the international banking system for many weeks before being definitively declared a fake. Normal checks bounce or clear in just a few days, which is why the bank sets such a short time to releasing the money.
It's not really Nissan.
- The bank will put a hold on all but $100 of the check amount.
- After a few days, they will release the money, conditional on you making the money good if the check later bounces (read your bank agreement).
- You will go "haha, check cleared, money in the bank!"
- You will send the money onward via Bitcoin, which is irreversible.
- The check will later bounce.
- The bank will require you to make the money good Right Now, as agreed.
- Optional: You are unable. ChexSystems blacklist. No banking for you for 7 years.
Scammer has your money, you are left holding the bag.
Money gets used for terror, human trafficking and other crime.
This works because scammers are really good at creating checks with routing information designed to make the check bounce around the international banking system for many weeks before being definitively declared a fake. Normal checks bounce or clear in just a few days, which is why the bank sets such a short time to releasing the money.
edited Mar 29 at 1:43
answered Mar 29 at 1:32
HarperHarper
25.1k63789
25.1k63789
6
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
add a comment |
6
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
6
6
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
+1 for that last paragraph that explains how the scam actually works.
– Tom
Mar 30 at 3:31
add a comment |
100% Scam
They want you to cash a check, which is a transaction that can be reversed such as if the check bounces.
Then give them money in bitcoin, which cant be reversed.
Most likely the check will bounce but you will already have given them the bitcoins and the bank will expect you to pay back that money you gave them while you will have no way of getting your money back.
add a comment |
100% Scam
They want you to cash a check, which is a transaction that can be reversed such as if the check bounces.
Then give them money in bitcoin, which cant be reversed.
Most likely the check will bounce but you will already have given them the bitcoins and the bank will expect you to pay back that money you gave them while you will have no way of getting your money back.
add a comment |
100% Scam
They want you to cash a check, which is a transaction that can be reversed such as if the check bounces.
Then give them money in bitcoin, which cant be reversed.
Most likely the check will bounce but you will already have given them the bitcoins and the bank will expect you to pay back that money you gave them while you will have no way of getting your money back.
100% Scam
They want you to cash a check, which is a transaction that can be reversed such as if the check bounces.
Then give them money in bitcoin, which cant be reversed.
Most likely the check will bounce but you will already have given them the bitcoins and the bank will expect you to pay back that money you gave them while you will have no way of getting your money back.
answered Mar 29 at 13:49
ChrisChris
38716
38716
add a comment |
add a comment |
Just to add some relevant information to the previous answers:
There are plenty of other ways the scam can work. It's possible that the check doesn't bounce - in such a case the source of the check is almost certainly illegally obtained funds, and what they are asking you to do is money laundering. Money laundering is a crime. Not knowing the law doesn't make it legal to break the law, so if the check doesn't bounce you're in even worse trouble.
Go to the police.
add a comment |
Just to add some relevant information to the previous answers:
There are plenty of other ways the scam can work. It's possible that the check doesn't bounce - in such a case the source of the check is almost certainly illegally obtained funds, and what they are asking you to do is money laundering. Money laundering is a crime. Not knowing the law doesn't make it legal to break the law, so if the check doesn't bounce you're in even worse trouble.
Go to the police.
add a comment |
Just to add some relevant information to the previous answers:
There are plenty of other ways the scam can work. It's possible that the check doesn't bounce - in such a case the source of the check is almost certainly illegally obtained funds, and what they are asking you to do is money laundering. Money laundering is a crime. Not knowing the law doesn't make it legal to break the law, so if the check doesn't bounce you're in even worse trouble.
Go to the police.
Just to add some relevant information to the previous answers:
There are plenty of other ways the scam can work. It's possible that the check doesn't bounce - in such a case the source of the check is almost certainly illegally obtained funds, and what they are asking you to do is money laundering. Money laundering is a crime. Not knowing the law doesn't make it legal to break the law, so if the check doesn't bounce you're in even worse trouble.
Go to the police.
answered Mar 31 at 15:20
PeterPeter
1,7061510
1,7061510
add a comment |
add a comment |
A scam beyond doubt.
- Companies pay you with a check or direct deposit, after deducting taxes, they do not have you take your salary and bonus out of a check that you have cashed.
- Companies do not have you take salary, expenses or bonuses out of a check you are depositing. Companies go to extraordinary lengths to clearly separate and document expenditures and income, to the extent that in some cases it cost them more to make a payment than the payment is actually worth. They do this so their books are clean and balanced which is worth the minor cost associated with doing so. I have personally received checks that were for amounts less than the cost of the stamp.
- Hiring an employee or contracting with a firm to handle financial transactions are both fairly big deals. In the first case you would have gone to their offices, been interviewed by several people, met with HR, your co-workers and managers, signed paperwork and did a lot of things I’m sure you didn’t do...as for contracting...Unless you are in the business of doing cash to bitcoin conversions, they would not approach you to do this. And if you were in the business of doing so, you would have your standard terms which they would either accept or attempt to negotiate.
- Nissan has a checking account somewhere, if they need funds deposited into their account, they will deposit the funds into their account.
- If instead of being an employee, you were an independent contractor, you would be paid either in advance or after invoicing them (depending upon your contract with them). But Nissan is a billion dollar business and isn’t going to contract with some nobody to do check clearance and bitcoin conversions.
- If Nissan needs bit coins for some reason, they aren’t going to get them in a way that involves paying fees to 2 independent middle men (in this case you and the atm operator).
add a comment |
A scam beyond doubt.
- Companies pay you with a check or direct deposit, after deducting taxes, they do not have you take your salary and bonus out of a check that you have cashed.
- Companies do not have you take salary, expenses or bonuses out of a check you are depositing. Companies go to extraordinary lengths to clearly separate and document expenditures and income, to the extent that in some cases it cost them more to make a payment than the payment is actually worth. They do this so their books are clean and balanced which is worth the minor cost associated with doing so. I have personally received checks that were for amounts less than the cost of the stamp.
- Hiring an employee or contracting with a firm to handle financial transactions are both fairly big deals. In the first case you would have gone to their offices, been interviewed by several people, met with HR, your co-workers and managers, signed paperwork and did a lot of things I’m sure you didn’t do...as for contracting...Unless you are in the business of doing cash to bitcoin conversions, they would not approach you to do this. And if you were in the business of doing so, you would have your standard terms which they would either accept or attempt to negotiate.
- Nissan has a checking account somewhere, if they need funds deposited into their account, they will deposit the funds into their account.
- If instead of being an employee, you were an independent contractor, you would be paid either in advance or after invoicing them (depending upon your contract with them). But Nissan is a billion dollar business and isn’t going to contract with some nobody to do check clearance and bitcoin conversions.
- If Nissan needs bit coins for some reason, they aren’t going to get them in a way that involves paying fees to 2 independent middle men (in this case you and the atm operator).
add a comment |
A scam beyond doubt.
- Companies pay you with a check or direct deposit, after deducting taxes, they do not have you take your salary and bonus out of a check that you have cashed.
- Companies do not have you take salary, expenses or bonuses out of a check you are depositing. Companies go to extraordinary lengths to clearly separate and document expenditures and income, to the extent that in some cases it cost them more to make a payment than the payment is actually worth. They do this so their books are clean and balanced which is worth the minor cost associated with doing so. I have personally received checks that were for amounts less than the cost of the stamp.
- Hiring an employee or contracting with a firm to handle financial transactions are both fairly big deals. In the first case you would have gone to their offices, been interviewed by several people, met with HR, your co-workers and managers, signed paperwork and did a lot of things I’m sure you didn’t do...as for contracting...Unless you are in the business of doing cash to bitcoin conversions, they would not approach you to do this. And if you were in the business of doing so, you would have your standard terms which they would either accept or attempt to negotiate.
- Nissan has a checking account somewhere, if they need funds deposited into their account, they will deposit the funds into their account.
- If instead of being an employee, you were an independent contractor, you would be paid either in advance or after invoicing them (depending upon your contract with them). But Nissan is a billion dollar business and isn’t going to contract with some nobody to do check clearance and bitcoin conversions.
- If Nissan needs bit coins for some reason, they aren’t going to get them in a way that involves paying fees to 2 independent middle men (in this case you and the atm operator).
A scam beyond doubt.
- Companies pay you with a check or direct deposit, after deducting taxes, they do not have you take your salary and bonus out of a check that you have cashed.
- Companies do not have you take salary, expenses or bonuses out of a check you are depositing. Companies go to extraordinary lengths to clearly separate and document expenditures and income, to the extent that in some cases it cost them more to make a payment than the payment is actually worth. They do this so their books are clean and balanced which is worth the minor cost associated with doing so. I have personally received checks that were for amounts less than the cost of the stamp.
- Hiring an employee or contracting with a firm to handle financial transactions are both fairly big deals. In the first case you would have gone to their offices, been interviewed by several people, met with HR, your co-workers and managers, signed paperwork and did a lot of things I’m sure you didn’t do...as for contracting...Unless you are in the business of doing cash to bitcoin conversions, they would not approach you to do this. And if you were in the business of doing so, you would have your standard terms which they would either accept or attempt to negotiate.
- Nissan has a checking account somewhere, if they need funds deposited into their account, they will deposit the funds into their account.
- If instead of being an employee, you were an independent contractor, you would be paid either in advance or after invoicing them (depending upon your contract with them). But Nissan is a billion dollar business and isn’t going to contract with some nobody to do check clearance and bitcoin conversions.
- If Nissan needs bit coins for some reason, they aren’t going to get them in a way that involves paying fees to 2 independent middle men (in this case you and the atm operator).
answered Mar 31 at 5:47
jmorenojmoreno
38729
38729
add a comment |
add a comment |
If you want to read more about this, it is a minor twist on a standard "advance fee" or "Nigerian 419" scam, and is, unfortunately, not uncommon.
The scammers must be getting people to fall for it, or they wouldn't continue trying. Good on you for at least catching it before it cost you money.
3
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
add a comment |
If you want to read more about this, it is a minor twist on a standard "advance fee" or "Nigerian 419" scam, and is, unfortunately, not uncommon.
The scammers must be getting people to fall for it, or they wouldn't continue trying. Good on you for at least catching it before it cost you money.
3
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
add a comment |
If you want to read more about this, it is a minor twist on a standard "advance fee" or "Nigerian 419" scam, and is, unfortunately, not uncommon.
The scammers must be getting people to fall for it, or they wouldn't continue trying. Good on you for at least catching it before it cost you money.
If you want to read more about this, it is a minor twist on a standard "advance fee" or "Nigerian 419" scam, and is, unfortunately, not uncommon.
The scammers must be getting people to fall for it, or they wouldn't continue trying. Good on you for at least catching it before it cost you money.
answered Mar 29 at 20:27
Spehro PefhanySpehro Pefhany
531211
531211
3
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
add a comment |
3
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
3
3
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
It's a scam all right, but an "advance fee scam" is something different from this.
– Henning Makholm
Mar 29 at 21:33
add a comment |
protected by JoeTaxpayer♦ Mar 28 at 21:30
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104
Yes that's a fraud. Go to the police. The checks are fake.
– Ben Voigt
Mar 28 at 16:15
22
How exactly did you get hired for this? Were you contacted out of the blue, or did you find a job ad that you applied to?
– Tas
Mar 28 at 21:46
13
What is your employment contract? Who have signed it, where have your signed it? Did you met the person that have signed it in the person?
– 9ilsdx 9rvj 0lo
Mar 29 at 7:25
7
"I've been hired by Nissan" - No, you were not.
– MonkeyZeus
Mar 29 at 17:54
8
If you gave them any personal, sensitive information then Identity Fraud is next (SSN, DL number, address, etc, etc.)
– JPhi1618
Mar 29 at 19:10