Anybody in San Jose want to kick a dirtbag's ass for me?
#24
Originally Posted by sixshooter
... San Jose police department .... She said due to budget cuts they no longer had a fraud department and that all of their officers were now out on patrol.
#25
Moderator
Thread Starter
iTrader: (12)
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Tampa, Florida
Posts: 20,660
Total Cats: 3,011
Local PD detective here in Florida advised me to contact the FBI and file a report yesterday, which I did. Still haven't heard **** from San Jose PD.
As the trail starts to grow colder...
Thank you for filing a complaint with the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3).
Your complaint has been submitted. Once processed by the IC3, you will be sent an email containing your complaint id and password to be used for future contacts with the IC3. This process can take several hours.
The IC3's mission is to serve as a vehicle to receive, develop, and refer criminal complaints regarding the rapidly expanding arena of cyber crime. The IC3 aims to give the victims of cyber crime a convenient and easy-to-use reporting mechanism. If you have comments or problems related to the IC3 website, please contact us.
Complaint Status
The IC3 receives thousands of complaints each month and does not have the resources to respond to inquiries regarding the status of complaints. It is the IC3's intention to review all complaints and refer them to law enforcement and regulatory agencies having jurisdiction. Ultimately, investigation and prosecution are at the discretion of the receiving agencies.
Evidence
It is important that you maintain any evidence you may have relating to your complaint. Evidence may include canceled checks, credit card receipts, phone bills, mailing envelopes, mail receipts, a printed copy of a website, copies of emails, or similar items. Please keep the items in a safe location, in case you are requested to provide them for investigative purposes.
Your complaint has been submitted. Once processed by the IC3, you will be sent an email containing your complaint id and password to be used for future contacts with the IC3. This process can take several hours.
The IC3's mission is to serve as a vehicle to receive, develop, and refer criminal complaints regarding the rapidly expanding arena of cyber crime. The IC3 aims to give the victims of cyber crime a convenient and easy-to-use reporting mechanism. If you have comments or problems related to the IC3 website, please contact us.
Complaint Status
The IC3 receives thousands of complaints each month and does not have the resources to respond to inquiries regarding the status of complaints. It is the IC3's intention to review all complaints and refer them to law enforcement and regulatory agencies having jurisdiction. Ultimately, investigation and prosecution are at the discretion of the receiving agencies.
Evidence
It is important that you maintain any evidence you may have relating to your complaint. Evidence may include canceled checks, credit card receipts, phone bills, mailing envelopes, mail receipts, a printed copy of a website, copies of emails, or similar items. Please keep the items in a safe location, in case you are requested to provide them for investigative purposes.
#29
Moderator
Thread Starter
iTrader: (12)
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Tampa, Florida
Posts: 20,660
Total Cats: 3,011
Ooohh! I got an email! It looks like the FBI is all over this!
Thank you for filing a complaint with the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3).
This is the only reply you will receive from the IC3. Because we receive thousands of complaints per week, we cannot reply to every complaint received or to every request for updates.
However, once we forward your complaint to investigators in the field, they may contact you for further information. Consequently, it is important that you maintain any evidence you have relating to your complaint. Evidence can include canceled checks, credit card receipts, phone bills, mailing envelopes, mail receipts, printed copies of websites, copies of emails, or similar items.
If you wish to view, download, or add information to your complaint, go to http://complaint.ic3.gov/update and log in with the following:
Complaint Id: (*****************)
Password: (*********)
To learn more about Internet schemes and ways to protect yourself visit Looks Too Good To Be True.
This is the only reply you will receive from the IC3. Because we receive thousands of complaints per week, we cannot reply to every complaint received or to every request for updates.
However, once we forward your complaint to investigators in the field, they may contact you for further information. Consequently, it is important that you maintain any evidence you have relating to your complaint. Evidence can include canceled checks, credit card receipts, phone bills, mailing envelopes, mail receipts, printed copies of websites, copies of emails, or similar items.
If you wish to view, download, or add information to your complaint, go to http://complaint.ic3.gov/update and log in with the following:
Complaint Id: (*****************)
Password: (*********)
To learn more about Internet schemes and ways to protect yourself visit Looks Too Good To Be True.
#32
Imagine if you gave private businesses a pass the way people do gov't agencies: You ask the mama-san for a slender blonde girl, and they send up a hairy leather clad bear, and you say "it's OK, I have no choice, it's a gov't program".
And why do statists say "monopolies bad" but any gov't agency, which is a monopoly, is OK?
#35
Elite Member
iTrader: (37)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Very NorCal
Posts: 10,441
Total Cats: 1,899
Humm... I was going to be in San Jose this weekend.
Unfortunately, this chain of events is all too common and criminals know it. Our local law enforcement folks are so unequipped to deal with any kind of fraud that involves a computer, so they just ignore it and pretend like it never happened. Paypal will get money back to the people whom it was stolen from, the vendors already got paid, your account gets reset and the oxygen thieves get some free iPhones and XBones. As it was said before, local PD don't give 2 *****. FBI or Sheriffs Dept on the receiving end is probably your best bet.
This. Microsoft, Sony and Apple all have mechanisms in place to blacklist devices from their services. Unfortunately you have to convince the seller to start this process because technically its the sellers merchandise that was stolen and you have no control as a 3rd party. They already got paid for their junk and paperwork just costs them time and money, so don't expect them to move quickly on this.
Unfortunately, this chain of events is all too common and criminals know it. Our local law enforcement folks are so unequipped to deal with any kind of fraud that involves a computer, so they just ignore it and pretend like it never happened. Paypal will get money back to the people whom it was stolen from, the vendors already got paid, your account gets reset and the oxygen thieves get some free iPhones and XBones. As it was said before, local PD don't give 2 *****. FBI or Sheriffs Dept on the receiving end is probably your best bet.
Call the seller and have them give you the ID's or serials of each unit they sold... then call Apple and tell them. Apple should be able to put a service denial on each unit so that the first time they try and access a network, they're deactivated. At least I think I remember them being able to do that. Turns them into paperweights. Joe Perez will probabaly know about 100 different ways around that **** though.
#36
Moderator
Thread Starter
iTrader: (12)
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Tampa, Florida
Posts: 20,660
Total Cats: 3,011
Does it matter if the iPhonie 6 Plus is jailbroken, because at least one of the descriptions I bothered to read said it was.
What is so sad is that we, as a people, have relinquished our rights to many forms of online privacy in the name of allowing the Feds to hunt down criminals and yet they don't really expend any effort doing that.
A colleague of my wife has been traveling extensively in the past few weeks for business. He was detained by the TSA at the beginning of this week because he was flagged for extensive recent air travel. He was brought to a room and interviewed. They asked him about the purpose of recent travels. They asked him which hotels he used in each place and what credit card he used. Without asking him to disclose his credit card number, consent to a search, or obtaining a warrant they were able to pull up his card numbers and complete purchase history to determine he did, in fact, stay where he had claimed on every occasion.
I'll spare you the eulogy for the 4th Amendment and just say that if they are going to have that much private personal information at their fingertips, at least expend the energy to catch a couple of bag guys every once in a while instead of meddling with frequent flyer business executives.
What is so sad is that we, as a people, have relinquished our rights to many forms of online privacy in the name of allowing the Feds to hunt down criminals and yet they don't really expend any effort doing that.
A colleague of my wife has been traveling extensively in the past few weeks for business. He was detained by the TSA at the beginning of this week because he was flagged for extensive recent air travel. He was brought to a room and interviewed. They asked him about the purpose of recent travels. They asked him which hotels he used in each place and what credit card he used. Without asking him to disclose his credit card number, consent to a search, or obtaining a warrant they were able to pull up his card numbers and complete purchase history to determine he did, in fact, stay where he had claimed on every occasion.
I'll spare you the eulogy for the 4th Amendment and just say that if they are going to have that much private personal information at their fingertips, at least expend the energy to catch a couple of bag guys every once in a while instead of meddling with frequent flyer business executives.
#37
I take it you never heard anything else about it?
Since no LEO's wanted to do their job. You should have bought a plane ticket, rented a car, drove to the address, and waited for the UPS guy. When he arrives it'd be easy enough to jump out and say, "Yeah, I'm Steve, I can sign for the deliveries, thanks." And then bring your free stuff back home.
Since no LEO's wanted to do their job. You should have bought a plane ticket, rented a car, drove to the address, and waited for the UPS guy. When he arrives it'd be easy enough to jump out and say, "Yeah, I'm Steve, I can sign for the deliveries, thanks." And then bring your free stuff back home.
#40
2 Props,3 Dildos,& 1 Cat
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Fake Virginia
Posts: 19,338
Total Cats: 573
I find myself in an ironic position in that I am now currently about 20 minutes from the location in San Jose and with access to various and sundry handheld ballistic lead expulsion devices.
However I am not in a position to help out because I am not a vigilante and have other priorities here--as you may have seen in the pictures thread.
Incidentally, I handed over some privacy to TSA and gave them money so I could be part of their known traveler program. Because my time is often more valuable than my privacy, I decided this was a fair exchange. This week in particular it was quite relieving to spend less than 5 minutes from the time I walked in the airport doors to the time I was standing at my gate.
However I am not in a position to help out because I am not a vigilante and have other priorities here--as you may have seen in the pictures thread.
Incidentally, I handed over some privacy to TSA and gave them money so I could be part of their known traveler program. Because my time is often more valuable than my privacy, I decided this was a fair exchange. This week in particular it was quite relieving to spend less than 5 minutes from the time I walked in the airport doors to the time I was standing at my gate.