Wow, some people are just out to ruin everybody's day.
The person who bought my car sent me $2000, when I asked for $1000. Great, right? Not so much. He sent me $2000, so I could take care of the movers for him. That's still not so bad, until I had to run to the bank to deposit the money, go back to get a cashier's check, go back again to undo the cashier's check (because he didn't want a cashier's check), then run to Walmart to do a money gram transfer, and had to pay for the transfer.
So that was half of my stressful day.
I thought it was all over. Technically, the vehicle was sold, right? So it's not mine anymore, right?
The guy texts me later, and tells me he doesn't want it anymore, and I need to send the money back to him. All of it. So I told him "no", because the car is paid for, he's already stressed me out enough, and I can't pay it all back now anyway, because I've spent some of it to take care of our needs. So he tells me he's going to get the police involved.
I haven't heard back, since I told him I had all the proof that the car was sold, and he can call the police, but it would basically be calling them because I'm not buying the car back from him. The police can't do anything, I'm assuming he knows that.
Then a couple of my friends told me that this guy was basically trying to scam me, and that I should call the police myself. So I did. The officer told me that I could keep the car and what was left of the money, since technically, he decided he didn't want the car anymore after he had already bought it. Mr. Police man told me I could try to resell the car.
The person who bought my car sent me $2000, when I asked for $1000. Great, right? Not so much. He sent me $2000, so I could take care of the movers for him. That's still not so bad, until I had to run to the bank to deposit the money, go back to get a cashier's check, go back again to undo the cashier's check (because he didn't want a cashier's check), then run to Walmart to do a money gram transfer, and had to pay for the transfer.
So that was half of my stressful day.
I thought it was all over. Technically, the vehicle was sold, right? So it's not mine anymore, right?
The guy texts me later, and tells me he doesn't want it anymore, and I need to send the money back to him. All of it. So I told him "no", because the car is paid for, he's already stressed me out enough, and I can't pay it all back now anyway, because I've spent some of it to take care of our needs. So he tells me he's going to get the police involved.
I haven't heard back, since I told him I had all the proof that the car was sold, and he can call the police, but it would basically be calling them because I'm not buying the car back from him. The police can't do anything, I'm assuming he knows that.
Then a couple of my friends told me that this guy was basically trying to scam me, and that I should call the police myself. So I did. The officer told me that I could keep the car and what was left of the money, since technically, he decided he didn't want the car anymore after he had already bought it. Mr. Police man told me I could try to resell the car.
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I used to work in a store that did Western Union transfers and this is a classic scam. FOR ANYONE READING THIS, PLEASE BEWARE OF ANYONE SENDING YOU MORE MONEY THAN WHAT YOU ASKED FOR, ESPECIALLY A LARGE AMOUNT.
Here's how it works: the "buyer" sends you a check, usually for a much larger amount than the selling price. The catch is, THE SELLER DOES NOT HAVE THE MONEY THEY ARE SENDING YOU. They send it as a check, but don't have the money to back the check. HOWEVER, what they'll want you to do, as Imma found out, is to either send them part of all the money back in the form of an automatic money transfer (Money Gram, Western Union, etc.) that they can pick up as cash.
They're banking on sending you a dead (fake or with no funds) check that will be used to send them cash before it's discovered that the check is worthless. (If you do this, you're sending them YOUR money, and they had no money to begin with, so guess who's REALLY paying out?)
I know it's an old saying, but if something sounds to good to be true, trust that something is wrong, especially when thousands of dollars are involved.
ALWAYS be suspicious of someone sends you more money than what you asked.