95 points

… and as the article fails to mention… what about the bloody TREES!? Imagine scammers cutting down a century-old, beautiful tree just to make a few hundred dollars. What a scummy, short-term, selfish thing to do. GRRRR.

Stories like this make me consider that humans deserve to go extinct. Maybe raccoons and corvids will do a better job of caring for this planet.

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31 points

If they actually cut them down, could you invoke TREE LAW? Wrongfully cutting down trees can lead to massive fines in the US, since they are so hard to replace.

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27 points

Especially since you could pull this scam with a whole lot of other businesses that wold not result in cutting down trees.

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24 points

Your mistake is thinking that scammers care about those things.

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Oh they do. This is one of the most common types of scams out there. It sucked that I technically had to participate in many attempts at these because I worked as a relay operator prior to there being rules allowing us to disconnect obvious scammers.

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1 point

Maybe the point is to also reduce the selling price and buy the house with trees cut down for cheaper?

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12 points

Raccoons and corvids? What, in the 30 minutes after they defeated the crabs, but before they evolved into crabs themselves?

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5 points

Once everything evolves into crabs, we’ll be doing a lot better on this planet.

That’s apparently our benevolent creator’s plan.

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5 points

slowly lifts Old Bay from under the bar

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1 point

Personally, I was expecting to read about some tree law here.

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1 point

… In a news story about swaths of people getting scammed, finding it, stopping it, helping others and news notifying everyone possible… Humanity deserves extinction because of some scammers probably in India?

Doomers are fucking stupid.

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91 points

Those guys are amateurs. Try being the Uk government—compulsorily purchase private land for new rail line, hand lucrative contracts to your mates to clear mature oaks (which they get to keep, worth £5k each), accidentally clear more than is needed, then cancel the rail line.

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33 points

Or Sheffield council and Amey cutting down healthy trees because they thought it would generate more profit in the street maintenance contract.

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21 points

I doubt I’ve ever seen a farce as big as the east leg of HS2.

It’s linking London and Leeds. No, it’s linking London and a tram stop 10 miles outside Nottingham. No, it’s linking London to the ruins of the last coal power station in Britain, and a bus stop to East Midlands Airport for some reason, even though London has like 4 fucking airports anyway and they all go to the same shithole cheap Euro dumps that EMA flies to. Ah you know what fuck it, you’re not getting HS2 at all.

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8 points

Shīt, that hurts me even reading this 😭

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0 points

One of the worst bits is a lot of the delays and budget problems came because of eco protectors like Swampy blocking construction. So frustrating such an important project to get heavy goods off the roads are attacked by people who should support it - now it could be decades before the British public will trust another major rail infrastructure project.

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2 points

So, blame eco protectors for the govt inability to prepare and finish a project while conveying its importance to the public?

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2 points

Fucking hell where did this happen?

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3 points

Well, I used a bit of poetic licence but there’s a case near me in the midlands in which the land owner has been forced to go to the high court (at his own expense) to get any chance of compensation. The tactics being used by hs2 and the Secretary of State are to frighten people into non-action. That is the leg of hs2 that is still (currently) going ahead.

But I’d eat my manky dog-walking hat if it’s the only example in the country.

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84 points

Why are Americans still dealing with checks in the age of digital banking?

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19 points

That same scam is also ran on every other payment method. These would all be prevented by not accepting checks that aren’t for the exact amount and don’t pay the difference in cash to the check writer.

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16 points
*

One reason is to avoid card transaction fees. For smaller companies providing often expensive services, like tree felling, they’ll pass on the card transaction fee to the client or recommend they just pay by check to avoid it.

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2 points

Which is against the agreement with the banks, but here we are.

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1 point

Even if it’s not explicitly passed on to the customer, prices increase to cover those fees. We had $7500 of tree felling and fire mitigation work done a few years ago. Assuming the fee is 3%, no reason for either party to pay $225 for the convenience of using a card when a check works fine.

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6 points

Because the US detests change of any form, even if it will make things better.

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4 points

More and more it seems like it’s especially if it’s gonna make things better lol

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6 points

Boomer contractors who can’t figure out how to take a payment on a mobile device.

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5 points

I still have to have a checkbook because my dog groomer and my tree trimmer/gutter cleaner companies both refuse to accept cards. They are small businesses and don’t want to deal with the fees. My options are go get cash every time, or keep a checkbook on hand to write checks. While I understand their reasoning, it’s infuriating that checks even still exist.

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0 points
*

Lots of small businesses using square and other payment processors.

Honestly if a business told me that they don’t take card, I’d tell them they don’t take my business. Unless they’re an exceptionally skilled artisan (and I’m in the market for an exceptionally skilled artisan), their shit stinks like everyone else’s, and there’s another guy right behind them that will gladly take my money.

Man I hate having to bring cash for Facebook marketplace meetups, but at least then it’s worth the hassle because it’s an exceptionally good deal or unique item.

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1 point

For me it’s services that I will pay by check for, not goods. My dog groomer took me a long time to find someone that would actually listen and not try to over-groom my dog. (Just bathe him, trim his paws and ears, and send his ass home! He’s a golden, do not cut off his chest fur, or his pantaloons, or his arm feathers!) And our gutter/tree guy because he legit charges half what the other larger companies in the area charge, does good work and cleans up after. I would rather give him a check than pay twice as much (not kidding) to the big corpo place via card.

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5 points

I haven’t had a checkbook in a long time.

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2 points

I have received a check for some equity with a previous employer. There is barely any bank on the continent that can do anything with it, so I’ll wait for my next overseas trip to cash it.

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4 points

I receive checks sometimes. My mother-in-law sends them as a gift, for example. But my credit union just lets me take a photo of the front and back through their app, with ‘VIA MOBILE DEPOSIT’ written on the back.

On the other hand, I couldn’t even tell you the last time I wrote a check.

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3 points

What are you talking about pretty much any bank can cash a check…?

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2 points

I pay in checks for large bills. I fail to see a problem

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3 points

The problem is, you don’t know if it’ll bounce till you try.

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2 points

Why would you use a functional system for the past fifty years that works? Instead of using a third party data harvesting middleman like Venmo/Cash app/Paypal who can reject your purchase because fuck you?

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21 points

Wait, you guys don’t have bank transfers in the USA? I can send money from my own bank account with no fees to every other bank in my country

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7 points

Y’all don’t have a government option?

In Brazil we can send money to each other between bank accounts. There’s even this new and fast system called “Pix”, in which you can, in just some seconds, create a code of a payment request, show it as QRCode, scan it and pay it. It’s pretty neat.

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3 points

Has no one here ever used a debit card?

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1 point

Momentum more than anything, lot of places don’t accept them at all

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1 point

It’s the only way to pay cashless without paying transaction fees. Big banks make too much off of credit card fees to allow instant transfers like the rest of the world.

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1 point

Thanks for reminding me I need to go get a check lol.

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-6 points

I’m certainly not handing out my card over the phone.

Many companies won’t accept credit cards or debit because of having cheats charge back, and because to avoid companies abusing cards and charging wrong, the onus is very heavily on the comoany. Basically, a charge back means that contractor or whatever isn’t getting paid.

The scam is easy enough to avoid. The first is to know who you’re dealing with, and that they’re authorized to authorize the work. Check the county property maps and match it to their ID. (If it’s corporate, or whatever, then an employee ID or something. Property managers have ways of demonstrating agency.)

Then, take payment before work starts. (Or at least a deposit.)

If that’s too much, then, when an over-payment does arrive, return the uncashed check and ask for a new one. (Or cash it, let the money settle then give the money back.)

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16 points

I’m certainly not handing out my card over the phone.

Wait till you learn your routing and account numbers are right there, unencrypted, on the check, and there’s basically zero protection against unauthorized drafts in the EFT system.

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0 points

You can’t take account and routing to most websites and buy shit like you can with the card/expiry/secret.

Is it perfect? No. But my bank should catch that anyhow- because I never write paper checks- I go online and tell them to mail one.

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61 points

This story makes me excited for the day we might someday have a tree-law or perhaps even bird-law sublemmy of our own.

Someday perhaps.

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18 points

Tree law is a thing, there are big lawsuits in the states over trees.

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7 points

The Japanese government recently arrested members of a big auto dealership for allegedly killings a few trees in front of their buildings.

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1 point

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9 points

Tree law was one of the few subreddits that I would actually read everytime I saw a post pop up in my feed. Something so satisfying about a good case of tree law.

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3 points

You know what could speed this up, is if lemmings were willing to go do some tree crime.

Then we could speed run getting the tree-law sublemmy. In fact I know a good starting template for tree crime…

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4 points

How would one report a tree crime, doesn’t seem the kind of thing to call 911 about?

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7 points

Or a scam-law…

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3 points

Bird law in this country is not governed by reason.

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3 points

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3 points
*

In this case, if the perp playing this game is caught, he can be sued for the cost of not only the wood of the tree, but the cost to replace it with the biggest tree possible (including grinding out the old stump, the equipment needed to dig the new hole for the new tree’s rootball, and transportation and planting of the tree itself). To get a large tree costs $1-2,000, never mind the outsized equipment necessary to move and plant it. So this can get quite expensive quite quickly.

Source: used to work in the industry, and had a friend who was a consultant on several cases like this, albeit it was generally malicious neighbors going after trees that weren’t on their property, because they ‘hated the leaves in the fall’ or ‘the tree was blocking their view’.

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52 points

The scam in question, from the article:

McKcraken said he never requested a tree removal service and didn’t want any trees at his Forest Hills house — which he’s trying to sell — removed.

“They’re trying to target vacant houses because the owners won’t know,” he said. “So that they can post themselves as the owner, and the owners won’t be home to stop it and won’t be home to notice it if the tree services do show up.”

The Wilson County Sheriff’s Office said the scheme begins with a scammer calling or emailing a tree service company for a quote on how much it would be to cut down trees. After receiving an estimated amount, they send the company a faulty check for more than needed.

Before the company realizes the checks are null and void, the scammer asks the company to pay back the difference.

“They send you a check for $1,500, and they want you to send $500 back to them,” Adam Barbee with Arbor Sense said. “And then that way, they take $500, and you try to go cash the check, and the check is no good.”

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84 points

“They send you a check for $1,500, and they want you to send $500 back to them,” Adam Barbee with Arbor Sense said. “And then that way, they take $500, and you try to go cash the check, and the check is no good.”

If someone sends me a check for $500 more than they should have, I would just have them send me another and void the incorrect one. Checks that don’t match invoices make for sloppy books.

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5 points

And oddly the only way to buy weed on plastic around here (legally) is for you to use a debit card, which they round up to the next $5 and give you back the change (which most usually ends up in the budtenders tip jar anyway).

It’s because the way the law is written, it’s actually processed as an ATM transaction.

Obviously this is a legal loophole, but there are legitimate reasons to extract more than necessary.

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2 points

Man, I had to look that up. That’s wild.

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4 points

Makes you wonder why so many are willing to just send some money back.

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4 points

Usually they camp it in language where they are only able to cut one check (company policy of one check per PO, for example), but they need to pay two people, you and another facilitator such as a transport service. The extra money is to pay for the transport service, which is actually also the scammer.

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3 points

Good idea.

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0 points
Deleted by creator
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35 points

That is like, actually one of the oldest scams in the book. I’m impressed.

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1 point

Yeah, this is textbook check fraud. The specific scam is called the fake check scam (who could have guessed?) It’s extremely common in online marketplaces too. Lots of “oh I’m sending a check to pay for your (very expensive) item and for the movers. If you could give $500 to the movers that’d be great.” Now you’ve handed the scammer $500 and they’ve stolen the item you had for sale.

For instance, let’s say you’re selling a motorcycle on Facebook marketplace. You’ll get contacted by someone offering your asking price. You accept. They overpay by like $500, and tell you that the excess is for the movers who show up to collect the bike. So you pay the dude $500 to take the bike. Then their payment bounces/gets reversed, and you’re out the payment you gave to the mover (really just the scammer, or the scammer’s friend,) and they stole your bike without paying for it.

I’m guessing they’ve pivoted to cutting trees because the online marketplaces wised up and started warning sellers about the potential scam.

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4 points

That’s a pretty interesting scam.

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17 points
*

People have been doing similar scam on used car sellers for years.

Example being I post a car for sale. Scammer offers to buy. Scammer brings check higher than the agreed price. Tells me I can deposit the whole check, just give them difference back in cash. Scammer leaves with that cash and the car. Few days later bank tells me the check was no good.

Used to hear about that often enough Craigslist even sent out warnings to sellers.

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