no1beyondfan
Member
if its too good to be true... its too good ha 
Adamski said:It's like my uncle Benson who died in Uganda and left me 1bn Ugandan Shillings. I am the only person in his will. He must have been a nice chap. His executors have emailed a few times now. Just need to send a cheque for £3,000 to release the monies... :lol:
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Georgio said:Basic common sense; if it looks too good to be true it is.
Common pointers for these types of scam:
- the adverts always have either a phone number or e-mail plastered over the image of the car, never in the body of the advert.
- the cars are always in a different country i.e. France or Spain.
- they always need the money wired that day or else the sale is off, typical pressure selling.
- they always have convincing stories about why they are selling so cheap.
- they will suggest 'lodging' the money with an 'independant' third party while they ship the car to you for your leisurely inspection.
- the independant third party company is actually 'piggy-backing' on a real website that they give you the website address for and they usually look totally legit. Phone numbers on the site are answered by the scammers who will 'help' you through the wire/ shipping process.
Basically, do not touch with the poverbial bog-brush ANY car deal where you can't see the car in the metal and you'll be ok.