If
someone you don’t know wants to pay you by check
but wants you to wire some of the money back,
beware! It’s a scam that could cost you
thousands of dollars.
How do fake check
scams work? There are many variations of the
scam. It usually starts with someone offering
to:
Buy something you advertised for sale;
Pay you to work at home;
Give you an “advance” on a sweepstakes you’ve
won; or
Give you the first
installment on the millions you’ll receive for
agreeing to transfer money in a foreign country
to your bank account for safekeeping.
The scammers often claim to be in other
countries and say it’s too difficult to pay you
directly, so they’ll have someone in the U.S.
who owes them money send you a
check or money order.
The amount of the check or money order may be
more than you are owed, so you are instructed to
deposit it and wire the rest to the scammer or
to someone else. Or you are told to wire some of
the money back to pay a fee to claim your
“winnings.” In some cases, the scammer promises
to transfer money directly to your bank account.
You provide your account information for an
electronic fund transfer. Instead, the crooks
send your bank a phony check or money order with
instructions to deposit it in your account. When
you check your balance, it looks like the funds
have arrived. Whatever the set-up, the result is
the same – after you’ve wired the money, you
find out that the check or money order has
bounced.