Attorney
General Mike DeWine
Mystery
Shopper Scam
(COLUMBUS,
Ohio) – Scammers are using
counterfeit checks that appear to be from The Ohio State University
Medical
Center, according to Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine and The Ohio
State
University Wexner Medical Center. The checks are part of a mystery
shopper
scam, in which consumers receive a letter stating that they have been
selected
as a "customer service evaluator" and must evaluate their local money
transfer service by wiring hundreds of dollars.
"We
want to warn consumers that these
checks are counterfeit and not valid," said Attorney General DeWine.
"Unfortunately scammers often use the names and images of reputable
organizations to make their ploys seem legitimate. No matter how real
the
checks look, consumers should not deposit them or send any money in
response."
In
the scam, consumers receive a letter from
the "Income Booster Mystery Shopper Group," which the letter falsely
claims to be a subdivision of The Ohio State University Medical Center.
The
letter congratulates the consumer on being selected to participate in
its
mystery shopper program. Enclosed with the letter is a $1,490 check.
Consumers
are instructed to take $350 of the funds as their salary, to wire
transfer
$990, and to use the remaining $150 as a shopping fund.
Consumers
who deposit the counterfeit check and
wire funds will lose money to the scam.
"Remember
that if a job opportunity sounds
too good to be true, it probably is," DeWine said. "If you receive a
letter about a job you never applied for and a check you weren't
expecting,
it's almost always a scam."
Consumers
should report potential scams to the
Ohio Attorney General's Office at 800-282-0515 or
www.OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov.
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