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Does this sound like a scam to you: 2005 horse trailer, hauls 3 horses, with living area for only $2,800?

There are several horse trailers on this site that are like this. I will email them from my junk email in case it's a scam. Has anyone every seen something like this?

http://www.freehorseads.com/trailer/photo.php?adnu...

3 Answers

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  • 9 years ago
    Favorite Answer

    100% scam.

    There is no 2005 horse trailer.

    There are stolen pictures of someone else's horse trailer.

    There is only a scammer trying to steal your hard-earned money.

    The next email will be from another of the scammer's fake names and free email addresses pretending to be the "shipping company/agent" and will demand you pay for "shipping costs", in cash, and only by Western Union or moneygram.

    Western Union and moneygram do not verify anything on the form the sender fills out, not the name, not the street address, not the country, not even the gender of the receiver, it all means absolutely nothing. The clerk will not bother to check ID and will simply hand off your cash to whomever walks in the door with the MTCN# and question/answer. Neither company will tell the sender who picked up the cash, at what store location or even in what country your money walked out the door. Neither company has any kind of refund policy, money sent is money gone forever.

    Now that you have responded to a scammer, you are on his 'potential sucker' list, he will try again to separate you from your cash. He will send you more emails from his other free email addresses using another of his fake names with all kinds of stories of cheap vehicles, great jobs, lottery winnings, millions in the bank and desperate, lonely, sexy singles. He will sell your email address to all his scamming buddies who will also send you dozens of fake emails all with the exact same goal, you sending them your cash via Western Union or moneygram.

    You could post up the email address and the emails themselves that the scammer is using, it will help make your post more googlable for other suspicious potential victims to find when looking for information.

    Do you know how to check the header of a received email? If not, you could google for information. Being able to read the header to determine the geographic location an email originated from will help you weed out the most obvious scams and scammers. Then delete and block that scammer. Don't bother to tell him that you know he is a scammer, it isn't worth your effort. He has one job in life, convincing victims to send him their hard-earned cash.

    Whenever suspicious or just plain curious, google everything, website addresses, names used, companies mentioned, phone numbers given, all email addresses, even sentences from the emails as you might be unpleasantly surprised at what you find already posted online. You can also post/ask here and every scam-warner-anti-fraud-busting site you can find before taking a chance and losing money to a scammer.

    If you google "fake car shipping scam", "western union shipping fraud" or something similar you will find hundreds of posts of victims and near victims of this type of scam.

  • 9 years ago

    It's a VERY common scam - there are over 1 million hits if you google horse trailer scam

    https://www.google.com/search?q=horse+trailer+scam...

    They will claim to be out of town and want you to send money, or even use company names like Ebay, Google Checkout, Yahoo finance, etc claiming they will hold the payment and ship the trailer to you

    If you cannot pick up the trailer in person from the seller, it's always going to be a scam

    Good idea using your junk email. No matter where they claim to be just tell them "that's such a strange coincidence but my brother/cousin/uncle/etc lives right near you. I'll send them over to check out the trailer and pay you in cash if they want it" - then see how quickly the trailer disappears

  • 9 years ago

    It's probably a scam:/

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