As part of our Debix contest (which is open for a few more days, if you want to enter) one reader relayed a great story on how he was scammed on eBay, and fought back. With a little ingenious detective work, he… well, I’ll just let Jay tell his own story (split into two parts)…

Back in 2001 I worked in a small ISP, it was so small that I represented half of the staff. I had offered to help a friend and his wife buy a laptop. Money was tight for them, so after doing some comparison shopping we decided to snipe a laptop off of EBay. Shortly after winning an auction on a good laptop, the seller sent an email with a story about his brother having financial problems. It was written inconsistently and I couldn’t tell if this guy was lying or just a bad writer. The seller asked that I send a cashiers check to his brother in Indiana. I had gotten a great price on the laptop for my friend, so greed won out over logic but my warning lights were flashing. After a few more emails I sent the check and communication stopped. I waited for a few silent days before I went back to EBay. It turns out EBay had (and has) this great service where you can look up the account information of a seller. EBay provided the name and address of a person living just outside of Washington D.C. With the help of a reverse lookup, that led to a phone number which brought me to my first of many interesting phone calls. I reached the seller, who we’ll call John, on the phone. After an awkward opening, I learned that John had been battling identify theft and had nothing to do with the EBay listing. He’s had fraudulent credit card charges from online purchases. He was just as interested in finding these folks as I was… I was stuck before I began. I had two leads, the email address and the address in Indiana where I sent the check. I used Google maps to find the Indiana address. From the aerial photography I learned the address was at a large apartment complex. I called the local police in Indiana, “EBay?” “Yes, an online auction site.” “…On the internet?” They told me that they couldn’t help me since I was in Minneapolis and that I had to contact my local police department. I tried to get them to drive by the address and check out the mail boxes. They wouldn’t budge. My local police were a little more well versed, “Yeah, Haha, EBay again”. They told me that since I mailed the check to Indiana the crime really happened in Indiana and there wasn’t anything they could do. After a few rounds I was told I could show up at my local police to fill out a report but that they wouldn’t do anything but file it. At this point I figured I could call the FBI because they’d have to help. I assumed since it was across state lines and it was a crime on the internet it must be against all sorts of laws I didn’t know about. Plus I’d been to DEFCON, I knew the feds were out there and watching. Turns out I was a little off about the feds. Once I found someone willing to talk about the case, I learned that fraud for the price a laptop was a little below the FBI radar by, oh, a 1000 percent or so.

Come back tomorrow, when Jay will share his efforts to track down the culprit…

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