So, I get an email from an old dear female friend, Jane, asking if she can email me to ask for a favour. I see her proper email address and photo. Looks very legit. I reply. She asks if I would buy $200 worth of Google Play cards at a store for a young friend she has in hospital because Jane and her husband are traveling and not able to do that herself. I should photo the card and email it to this person from Jane. I know this is
exactly what Jane would do for someone in hospital, and I know Jane and her husband travel a lot. I do not hesitate to help Jane. Yet, I have no idea what a Google Play card is. I search Amazon.com and send Jane a screen shot to confirm the right play card. Jane replies. So, I go to a local store and buy such a card, photo the back code number, and email it to the person in "hospital" with a friendly greeting from Jane. I blind copy my "friend", Jane, to show her I have done this. I know Jane will pay me back. That hospital person replies and thanks Jane.
Next day I get another email from my Jane with a wonderful message how grateful the person in hospital was, and could I do the same for TWO more $200 cards. I reply I will not be able to go to the store today. Can Jane wait a day? Another nice reply, but an odd choice of words.
Jane says her wifi service is poor where she is. So, I do the same. I buy and email two cards to the person in hospital.
I ask Jane to e-transfer me the $600. Jane replies that she will mail a cheque. Also understandable as Jane is not a high tech, e-transfer type of person at 60+ years of age.
Then I get another email from Jane if I could do that again for $800, and what is my address so she can mail me the cheque? Now, I notice the email sender address behind Jane's name is different. And why are you asking me the 3rd time. Her 40 year old son would have done this, but he died last year. So I feel a bit guilty not to help. But this time I phone her to confirm the situation, and find out Jane knows nothing about this!! And several of her other friends have been approached the same way! Who knows how many?
I immediately phone VISA ( 70 minutes on hold!) to cancel the pending transactions. They tell me I have to go to the store to do that in the morning. The retailer says they can do nothing as the transactions have gone through and I have already emailed the Play Card code at the back.
I call the AntiFraud office (Canada). They only
record information and do not
investigate! And their recording says they are too busy today to talk with a live person.
I call the police to lodge a complaint. There is nothing they can do. Even though I have three emails from this hospital person, and they are waiting for me to send them the next $800 Play Cards. Couldn't I lead them on? They suggest not to undertake such an action.
I call my phone service provider to ask if anything can be done to track down the 3 emails I have received - My friend's original address, a gmail address, and an iCloud address. They cannot take any action other than I should let Jane know what has happened.
I email Jane to talk to her and husband. No reply. Then I phone her.
She is shocked and has not received ANY of my emails! She now has to completely change her email address because someone has hacked into her contact list. I am now very wary to email her at all.
End of story -
No one can do anything to stop this *\%&#! perp? So they get to continue this BS ad infinitum?
An expensive lesson that cost me $600!
Hope this helps someone here to learn from my gaff! I do feel 2% better by venting here.