Anyone with a FB account able to help with a scammer?
Anyone with a FB account able to help with a scammer?
Author
Discussion

MHB

Original Poster:

431 posts

260 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
Vulnerable relative got scammed through a FB Marketplace advert last night when buying a phone and is currently £550 out of pocket. They checked the IMEI number on the phone via one of the websites to see it wasn't stolen, that it matched the number on the box, phone turned one etc. and all seemed ok. However when she got home the phone won't charge (tried 4 different cables), won't accept an Apple ID or update iOS beyond 17.0.2. location services etc - so once the current charge runs out it's just a useless paperweight! The seller won't respond to calls / messages as expected. Unfortunately they paid via bank transfer rather than Paypal, so no route of recovery that way - so need a friendly face to face discussion to resolve.

Would anyone with a FB account in East Anglia be able to enquire about the item on Marketplace and maybe arrange to meet and collect? I'll take things from there, and can't do it myself as live in the same town as my relative and think they'd spot it straight away.

If you're able to assist please message me and I'll send the link to the advert across.

Tony1963

5,808 posts

184 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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And if it all goes very wrong, someone here will be be helping police with their enquiries. Sorry, I won’t help here.

OverSteery

3,794 posts

253 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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If it's fully charged and works OK, then possibly worth getting repaired?



mgtony

4,163 posts

212 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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Am I missing something. If she has bought it, what is someone else hoping to arrange to meet up and buy?

Lopey

262 posts

120 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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Get in touch with the bank. If the money is still in the scammers account, a bank transfer can be reversed

VSKeith

1,610 posts

69 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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mgtony said:
Am I missing something. If she has bought it, what is someone else hoping to arrange to meet up and buy?
The scammer is likely to still be selling dodgy phones with the same/similar ad.

A confrontation is hoped for

Countdown

46,862 posts

218 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
mgtony said:
Am I missing something. If she has bought it, what is someone else hoping to arrange to meet up and buy?
My guess is that they were hoping to strike down the scammer with great vengeance and furious anger and the scammer would know that they had messed with a PHer when he lays his vengeance upon them.

wink

Basically I suspect Op was going to dmand the money back with menaces.

bitchstewie

63,375 posts

232 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
So how does this work?

HelpfulPete from East Anglia contacts the scammer and arranges to meet them and instead MHB turns up with his very particular set of skills.

If it ends up with the Police who's name is the scammer going to give them scratchchin

Wacky Racer

40,470 posts

269 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
I can't understand why anyone would pay £550 for a second hand phone. You can buy a perfectly good new one for £250.


Same thing with watches, my £20 one tells the time perfectly and if I get mugged I'll buy another one.

119

16,510 posts

58 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
I can't understand why anyone would pay £550 for a second hand phone. You can buy a perfectly good new one for £250.


Same thing with watches, my £20 one tells the time perfectly and if I get mugged I'll buy another one.
Brilliant.

rolleyes

Durzel

12,944 posts

190 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
I can't understand why anyone would pay £550 for a second hand phone. You can buy a perfectly good new one for £250.


Same thing with watches, my £20 one tells the time perfectly and if I get mugged I'll buy another one.
Not everyone wants to walk around with a Aliexpress phone and Casio watch confused

OP have they tried charging it wirelessly?

Ham_and_Jam

3,301 posts

119 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
quotequote all
Durzel said:
OP have they tried charging it wirelessly?
Or removed the fluff from the charging port with a toothpick?

scorcher

4,093 posts

256 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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Unless I’m missing something, just set up another Facebook account confused

Tye Green

946 posts

131 months

Sunday 14th January 2024
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the phone obviously charged up fine before sale so more likely that the fault has developed between collection and getting it home .

what a bizarre thread confused

Griffith4ever

6,224 posts

57 months

Monday 15th January 2024
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Lopey said:
Get in touch with the bank. If the money is still in the scammers account, a bank transfer can be reversed
No, it can't. Not unless the scammers account is also fraudulent/not his.

Edited by Griffith4ever on Monday 15th January 08:54

Lopey

262 posts

120 months

Monday 15th January 2024
quotequote all
Griffith4ever said:
No, it can't. Not unless the scammers account is also fraudulent/not his.

Edited by Griffith4ever on Monday 15th January 08:54
You might want to tell Natwest that then, as obviously they made a mistake when they managed to reverse a bank transfer for me.

VSKeith

1,610 posts

69 months

Monday 15th January 2024
quotequote all
Lopey said:
Griffith4ever said:
No, it can't. Not unless the scammers account is also fraudulent/not his.

Edited by Griffith4ever on Monday 15th January 08:54
You might want to tell Natwest that then, as obviously they made a mistake when they managed to reverse a bank transfer for me.
Might be complicated by the fact they were given a phone. Otherwise we could just reverse transactions by saying goods received were faulty

Braveheart300

581 posts

211 months

Monday 15th January 2024
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Depending on type of phone (Iphone maybe?) there are lots of fakes around now.

Look and feel and operates almost identical to a normal iphone until updates etc are required and can't connect to apple. Fakes are amazing nowadays and would bet a lot of money hardly anyone would notice the difference!

GreatGranny

9,519 posts

248 months

Monday 15th January 2024
quotequote all
OP, can't you get a family member/mate etc. to help rather than randoms on the web?

It's asking a lot for them to put themselves in that situation.

What will you do when/if you meet?

Yellow Lizud

2,779 posts

186 months

Monday 15th January 2024
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
I can't understand why anyone would pay £550 for a second hand phone. You can buy a perfectly good new one for £250.


Same thing with watches, my £20 one tells the time perfectly and if I get mugged I'll buy another one.
Exactly this.
Personally I can't think of anything more ludicrous than paying £550 for a phone.
Oh hang on. I lied, I can think of something more ludicrous than paying £550 for a phone ............
........paying £550 for a second hand phone from FaceCon Market Place.