Anonymous Poster
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
- Messages
- 29,678
Ok, so the scam here was to get the property. Forged check, get the car, disappear with the car. Maybe move it out of the country, maybe chop it for parts, maybe get the title from a junked car and change the Vehicle ID number plates (although you end up with a salvaged title there). Once again, people selling something are trusting that the buyer is who they say they are. They probably don't even check ID once an official looking cashiers check is presented. Then they end up with, surprise-surprise, a bogus check and no way to identify the people who took the car. Furthermore, it may be a week before the bank tells them the check is bogus. If it is drawn on a distant bank, you have no way to go to the bank and verify that it is valid. A week is a long time to hide the vehicle. If the scamers are really good, they have a license plate for the same make and model of car that they immediately put on the vehicle so that if stopped, they have legitimate papers except that the VIN number on the registration doesn't match the registration.