Read through the following post on an anti-moving scam web site, and see what strikes you.”I am looking for anyone and everyone that has been scammed by this company. They currently have my things, and want $9,000 wired to their international account if I want my things. I have filed complaints, and have made contacts already… I hate to tell you but contacting the police wont help…WARNING: JK went insurance shopping earlier this week (After posting here) and got his license back yesterday. He’s now a legal scammer.”
Don’t you notice the paralyzing sense of helplessness that grips the victim of the scam being described here? You’re reading the please of people who have come face to face with the perpetrators of a scheme, which is at once polished, poised, and proficient.
Now picture the moving scammers, who have a families belongings on their truck, as they ride down a long deserted desert road. Wil a little imagination, they will reming you of that famous science fiction story of aliens from outer space, who deliver deadly pods across the country , in moving trucks. Whoever comes in contact with a pod and falls asleep, will be turned into an alien sympathizer. Soon, the only two survivors find themselves surrounded by a town of strangers who have been subverted to the alien cause. It’s likewise with moving scams. The victims begin calling around to the police, to the FBI, to the BBB, and repeatedly, in many cases are told that the agency can do nothing to help them. They have to go to court. And all the while, the moving scammers are trying to lull them into complacency. Pay us the money, (the padded bill), and you’ll get the goods. Or, sign a form waiving all rights to complain about our treatment, and we’ll deliver your stuff. Or give us a good tip, and we’ll lower the bill.
The scene is a bit surreal. Because the scammers are clever, “If you want a real scare, scroll to the bottom of the A and B webpage and look how many other sites their using to redirect web traffic to their “Expert Moving Consultants” at A and B/Cross America.”
Moving scammers are emboldened and seemingly unconcerned about the law: “The above poster is correct. Your license is currently inactive, having been revoked for the 2nd time (along with a staggering 3 Out of Service revocations) since March 2006.”
And moving scammers are almost superhumanly resilient: “So you know that when Cross America Van Lines gets shut down by the DOT in a week or two, that he’ll open up another moving company and start all over.”
The moving scams continue like so many protean alien creatures, chop off one head, and another head will spring up in another place. Or stop them in one form, and they will mutate to a new form and begin a new.
Thanks to Packing Service Inc. for sponsoring this report. Packing Service Inc. is a national packing services company dedicated to protected consumers from moving scam
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