Scam Alert

WarningWho doesn’t want to receive a fat check in this expensive holiday period? Well, that’s exactly what just happened to me! Today, UPS delivered a cashier’s check in the amount of $2,650.00. The remitter was Karen S Bower. It came from:

The Timken CO
PO Box 8826
Canton, OH 44711

Timken is one of the world’s leading producers of highly engineered antifriction bearings, related products and services, and alloy steel and components. Timken has operations in 26 countries on six continents.

So far, so good. But hold on… There’s one tiny problem: I have never worked for Timken. Five seconds and one internet search later, I uncovered the following message:

“The Better Business Bureau serving Southeast, Central & Western Kansas, learned about a scam using the Timken Company’s UPS account to ship fraudulent checks to businesses Nationwide in exchange for services not rendered.

The scam artists are contacting businesses found on Craigslist, newspaper, and online advertisements about hiring the company to perform services. The scam artist then sends the company a fraudulent check before services are performed and tells the company accounts payable has made a mistake and instructs the business to cash the check, keep $500 for the inconvenience, and Western Union or Money Gram the rest to a UPS box. The UPS account is registered under the Timken Company’s name. The checks display a variety of legitimate business names with a PO Box 8826, Canton, OH 44711-8826 address, which is The Timken Company’s UPS address. The checks are not legitimate and if cashed, the individual is responsible for the full amount.

A local spokesperson for the Timken Company says they have been made aware their UPS address is being used in the scam and are working with UPS to investigate the matter.

The Better Business Bureau offers the following advice to businesses that advertise on Craigslist, in newspapers, and online:

- Get as many details from the consumer as possible before you begin work.

- Investigate checks that appear to come from someone other than the person that hired you to do the job.

- Never cash a check from anyone that tells you to keep some of the money for your inconvenience and wire the rest back.

- Check with your local Better Business Bureau if something just doesn’t seem right.”

With that information in hand, I contacted the local FBI office, as well as the Better Business Bureau in my area, alerting them about the suspicious Timken check.

So, should a UPS truck bring some holiday cheer to your home this season, double-check the check, and make sure you know the difference between a Steel company and a company that’s trying to Steal!

SECOND SCAMtp-logo
Recently, I was contacted by Andrew Lancaster from the UK. He wanted to buy my like-new Sennheiser MD21U mic, that I had put up for sale on Sweetwater’s Trading Post.

When I told Andrew the mic was his, he couldn’t be more thrilled. He wrote back:

“the payment will be deliver to you this week or next week…So please as soon as you receive the payment, get it cashed immediately, deduct the money for the item and send the remaining balance to the shipping agent that handles the shipment via Western union money transfer. Moreso, I’ll be giving you an extra $50 for keeping this item for me till the shipper’s come for the pick up and to know you’re selling this to me.”

Wow… an extra $50 just to hold the item! This was better than Andrew’s spelling and grammar! But as someone who grew up with the notion that one should always give a person the benefit of the doubt, I decided to find out what would happen next. Sure enough, Andrew wrote back that a considerable amount of money was on the way:

“So i will like to assure your mind to accept it and cash it because its going to ternish the plan which i’ve layed out already for my new home, i just want everything to be set up well and ready to live asap. Thats why i asked my finance house to issue such amount to you on trust.”

At that point I pulled the plug and told him I was only going to accept the money for the mic, and it had to be via PayPal. What followed was a desperate appeal to accept the deal, but after that, Andrew rapidly disappeared from the event horizon.

Sweetwater warns:

* To avoid scams, deal locally or pay with PayPal.
* Never pay with Western Union, Moneygram, or any other anonymous payment service.
* Don’t buy or sell outside of your country. Don’t accept cashier checks from anyone outside your country.
* Sweetwater Trading Post is never involved in any transaction and does not handle payments, shipping, guarantee transactions, provide escrow services, or offer “buyer protection” or “seller certification.”
* If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

And Sweetwater has more tips for safe shopping. You may access them by clicking on this link.

Meanwhile, I have two questions for you:

1. If you have any scam alerts, please pass them on!

2.  Are you interested in a like-new Sennheiser MD21U mic?

SennheiserPaul Strikwerda © 2009

www.nethervoice.com

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Nail ‘em to the wall!

Laurel & HardyHumor and humiliation. It’s a weird combination and yet, it’s the basis of every slapstick. Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Laurel and Hardy, they all made us laugh because they made someone else cry. It’s that cake-in-your face humor, the poke in the eye joke, and the dignitary forced to parade around town in his underpants that never seems to get old.

Embarrassing people is funny business. Especially if we embarrass  those who were born without a funny bone. Sometimes it can be an effective deterrent too.

THE CONTINUING SAGA
If you’ve been following recent revelations on the limited success of Pay-to-Play sites, and the question that started it all What happens to our demos?“, you must have noticed that this storm still hasn’t subsided. Today, voices.com Stephanie Ciccarelli wrote a two page “Clarification on the Status of Job Postings” on Vox Daily.

At the same time, voices.com has made changes to their SurePay system to prevent abuse from customers, specifically credit card fraud. And as you know, that’s not the only kind of abuse that’s going on in our industry. On the LinkedIn Working Voice Actor Group, a colleague wrote about a lead she got from a P2P site. The voice-seeker said they wanted to hire her, but instead they used her scratch track and turned it into a commercial. The next day they had it airing all over the country. The talent never got paid and she only found out about it after friends alerted her when they heard her voice on the radio.

This is what I would like to know:

  • Apart from the bad guys, who should be held responsible? The talent, because she didn’t watermark her scratch track or charge the voice-seeker for recording a demo?
  • Is the Pay-to-Play site to blame because they were responsible for the lead?
  • Would this have happened had this been a union job?
  • Would this have happened had the talent used an agent?
  • What can be done to make sure other voice-talents don’t fall into the same trap?

SCAMS GALORE
Of course trusting, law-abiding citizens like you and I are getting ripped off each and every day. This Double Dutch dude does double duty as a translator, and I got burned once or twice by a client writing out a bad check. I ran to the nearest Better Business Bureau and filed a complaint, but all they could do was lower the rating of the translation agency.

Hall of FameHowever, as a member of Translatorscafe.com (a P2P site for interpreters), I have a not so secret weapon at my disposal. It’s called: “The Hall of Fame and Shame”. This is a members-only area, filled with feedback about unreliable agencies, dirty rotten scoundrels, reputable translators and anything in between. Before I take on a new job, I always enter this Hall to see what I can find. It’s by no means foolproof because not every agency is rated, but I backed out of a job a few times, because I discovered that I had been contacted by a bad apple. The thing is: con artists are notorious repeat offenders, and as soon as they are found out, they move on to another unsuspecting victim.

It’s important to note that this Hall is for people on the demand as well as the supply side. Some translators are less talented than others. Some let a computer program do all the work while they are having all the fun. Some miss their deadlines and ‘mysteriously disappear’ from the radar screen. All of that is exposed. Apart from the bad and the ugly, there’s also lots of good stuff going on in the Hall. People sing the praises of interpreters and agencies alike. In that way, the Hall serves as both a carrot and a stick.

WarningEARLY WARNING
Wouldn’t it be great if we had such an early warning system in place in our industry? You can find hints of it on certain sites, but as far as I can tell, there’s no database that’s filled with red flags and smiley faces. There’s no blacklist of known crooks that have stolen our demos, taken our money or conveniently forgot to pay us. Translatorscafé knows who they are. How about Voices.com?

Or are these sites just a funnel instead of a filter? Is this simply beyond their control? Should we just pay them a yearly fee and trust that nothing bad will ever happen? And when it does, are we condemned to fight the thugs on our own? Donna Summers (voplanet) wrote to the working voice actor group:

“(…) you guys chose not to use agents when you joined the P2P’s. You wanted to do it all yourselves, including negotiating, booking, and monitoring your auditions and jobs. P2P’S get you the auditions and you still complain! Save that big 10% you pay an agent to deal with these issues for you. And now you expect someone to jump in and save you from the big bad ad agents? You can’t have it both ways, Talent.”

Is she right? Are we paying the price for not being willing to pay an agent? How about those of us who can’t get one? Agents are highly selective, especially in this economy. And are agents immune to scams? Let’s ask the victims of Bernie Madoff! Steven Spielberg, Jeff Katzenberg and Elie Wiesel all fell for his scheme. I’m pretty sure that all of them had good advisors.

My point is this: we can’t always prevent bad things from happening. Part of this world is still a nasty and dark place. But it’s what we do after the fact that matters. Let’s put something in place that can serve as a deterrent and as a reference. Our weapon: a “Hall of Fame and Shame”. Our punishment: public humiliation!

PARTY TIME
Dunk TankOne final thought. Every year my street has a much anticipated block party. In fact, it’s one of the oldest in the nation that is still going strong. This year’s highlight was not the moon bounce or the Chinese auction. Any idea what was? You guessed it: it was the dunk tank.

Paul Strikwerda © 2009

www.nethervoice.com

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