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Topic: LocalBitcoins BEWARE of fraud!!! (Read 6393 times)

newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0
March 08, 2014, 01:01:30 PM
#38
Just lost both mine and my wifes bank accounts and all the money in them b/c someone paid me with stolen details.
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
December 24, 2012, 11:26:21 AM
#37
I sold £200 of bitcoins to - https://localbitcoins.com/accounts/profile/cooperjoe1/ - by instant bank transfer and they paid me with stolen details.  Now my bank account is frozen and now my Christmas money has not been paid in.

You should change the thread title to: "Instant Bank Transfer BEWARE of fraud!"


This.

Indeed, + this.

ps - sorted my bank issue - mine are just deducting what would of been the profit, rather reasonable of them I thought, considering when I told the woman I'd sold some bitcoins she didn't have a clue what I was talking about. She even sent me a reply to my very educational email a few recommendations for when dealing with bank transfers (note that in the interests of keeping peoples conversations private - between me and my bank I have paraphrased a little :-

1) Check the name of the remitter matches the name of the person you are dealing with
2) Find out as much information about them as possible. Fraudsters will tend to flit around and not build up history so these are the type of characters you would want to avoid or get a safer method of payment from.
3) I would consider Paypal and Visa to be safer methods of payment than Bank Transfers.

Well, I think points 1 & 2 are spot on and thinking about it, I failed on points 1 & 2, however 3......

LOL, did I read that right? Your bank told you paypal and visa were safer then wire transfer? That's funny, is it not?

I'm guessing they don't want your dirty little bitcoin business?
full member
Activity: 179
Merit: 100
December 23, 2012, 08:06:17 PM
#36
I sold £200 of bitcoins to - https://localbitcoins.com/accounts/profile/cooperjoe1/ - by instant bank transfer and they paid me with stolen details.  Now my bank account is frozen and now my Christmas money has not been paid in.

You should change the thread title to: "Instant Bank Transfer BEWARE of fraud!"


This.

Indeed, + this.

ps - sorted my bank issue - mine are just deducting what would of been the profit, rather reasonable of them I thought, considering when I told the woman I'd sold some bitcoins she didn't have a clue what I was talking about. She even sent me a reply to my very educational email a few recommendations for when dealing with bank transfers (note that in the interests of keeping peoples conversations private - between me and my bank I have paraphrased a little :-

1) Check the name of the remitter matches the name of the person you are dealing with
2) Find out as much information about them as possible. Fraudsters will tend to flit around and not build up history so these are the type of characters you would want to avoid or get a safer method of payment from.
3) I would consider Paypal and Visa to be safer methods of payment than Bank Transfers.

Well, I think points 1 & 2 are spot on and thinking about it, I failed on points 1 & 2, however 3......

legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 1032
RIP Mommy
December 23, 2012, 06:54:21 PM
#35
I sold £200 of bitcoins to - https://localbitcoins.com/accounts/profile/cooperjoe1/ - by instant bank transfer and they paid me with stolen details.  Now my bank account is frozen and now my Christmas money has not been paid in.

You should change the thread title to: "Instant Bank Transfer BEWARE of fraud!"


This.
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
December 23, 2012, 10:22:59 AM
#34
I sold £200 of bitcoins to - https://localbitcoins.com/accounts/profile/cooperjoe1/ - by instant bank transfer and they paid me with stolen details.  Now my bank account is frozen and now my Christmas money has not been paid in.

You should change the thread title to: "Instant Bank Transfer BEWARE of fraud!"
sr. member
Activity: 412
Merit: 250
December 23, 2012, 07:35:49 AM
#33
The bank (HSBC) said they may be closing my account and said I should have had a business account, even tho I told them it was only a hobby  Huh

kinda crazy how you are a the victim of fraud, and they want to punish you for that.


HSBC seems to be quite unfriendly towards bitcoin. It was not too long ago that Mtgox had a HSBC account for accepting international wires, which they also had to close. I would recommend using a different bank.
full member
Activity: 179
Merit: 100
December 22, 2012, 11:12:18 PM
#32
Same thing happened to me.  I did multiple trades in one day and I'm not sure which one is flagged yet.  I am really irritated because multiple people told me UK bank transfers were irreversible, and this is the reason I accepted it.

Is this over the last few days yeah? seems to be a spate of it lately then.

I thought they were as well to be honest, or at least pretty much, I guess after seeing so much "dont accept paypal" I let my guard down on the whole hacked bank accounts thing. I did wonder if its the actual ower of the bank accounts pulling a scam, not sure what I base that on.
sr. member
Activity: 257
Merit: 250
Not trusting third parties with my private keys
December 22, 2012, 01:34:12 PM
#31
Same thing happened to me.  I did multiple trades in one day and I'm not sure which one is flagged yet.  I am really irritated because multiple people told me UK bank transfers were irreversible, and this is the reason I accepted it.
full member
Activity: 179
Merit: 100
December 22, 2012, 05:47:03 AM
#30
I sold £200 of bitcoins to - https://localbitcoins.com/accounts/profile/cooperjoe1/ - by instant bank transfer and they paid me with stolen details.  Now my bank account is frozen and now my Christmas money has not been paid in.

Thinking about it, when did you do this trade, I did mine late Tuesday nite, it was flagged by my bank in the morning - I wonder if it from the same account or a different one as I wondered if he was pulling a swift one (ie getting the bitcoins and claiming fraud on his account).

Email us some details if you could, wouldnt mind poking around.
full member
Activity: 179
Merit: 100
December 22, 2012, 05:36:36 AM
#29
Matthewh3, that sucks dude - that same guy had me for £340 on Tuesday night - did you not see my feedback on his profile advising people not to trade with him? (didn't leave that until the evening, after tho after my bank had rang that day).

My bank haven't done anything like frozen my account, awaiting a call back but last I heard she was just looking at deducting what would of been profit on the trade. End of the day its the other persons banks fault surely, they let someone use there customers account without there knowledge (doesnt it work like that?). Under what grounds are they freezing your account?

Tell them to fu*ck right off! bloody banks!
legendary
Activity: 2492
Merit: 1473
LEALANA Bitcoin Grim Reaper
December 21, 2012, 08:06:46 PM
#28
Hopefully OP learned his lesson. Don't trust anyone. Deal in person if it is for cash.
legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1016
Strength in numbers
December 21, 2012, 07:40:39 PM
#27
Casinos I think are busy enough places that, as long as you aren't looking to shifty, you'd probably be ok.
Inside the casino? I wouldn't recommend that.
Why?

Well, a casino runs a business that is heavily regulated.  As such they are very sensitive to anything that might be occurring on their property.
They might see your cash transfer and think it could be related to loan sharking or maybe for some other activity they would rather not be a part of nor privy to being a witness.

If you've piqued their curiosity (and nowhere are you monitored more closely than when inside a casino), you then get a nice escort to a private office where you will be asked for the full, complete details about exactly just what is going on.  For one, if I am trading with you, I might prefer that you not disclose to a third party (casino management) any information that you might know about me.  

And then you will be asked, in a polite but firm manner, to never again conduct your exchange business on their property.

The inside of banks, casinos, and police stations are probably not your best places to conduct a trade.  Most other businesses open to the public probably wouldn't care as much.

I don't think so, an insane amount of cash passes hands in a casino and they don't interfere. Stakees to stakers, husband to wife, friend to friend. I mean you might manage to make yourself suspicious enough, but you'd probably have to try. The casino wants money to flow, usually people getting money in a casino are getting it in order to gamble. Even if that isn't the point of the transfer they know there is a chance (and they love chances).

But I don't think there is much advantage unless you or your customers spend time in the casino anyway. You are safe pretty much wherever people are around. Just don't do stupid things like $10k+ with a person you are meeting for the first time.
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1010
December 21, 2012, 07:26:24 PM
#26
Casinos I think are busy enough places that, as long as you aren't looking to shifty, you'd probably be ok.
Inside the casino? I wouldn't recommend that.
Why?

Well, a casino runs a business that is heavily regulated.  As such they are very sensitive to anything that might be occurring on their property.
They might see your cash transfer and think it could be related to loan sharking or maybe for some other activity they would rather not be a part of nor privy to being a witness.

If you've piqued their curiosity (and nowhere are you monitored more closely than when inside a casino), you then get a nice escort to a private office where you will be asked for the full, complete details about exactly just what is going on.  For one, if I am trading with you, I might prefer that you not disclose to a third party (casino management) any information about our trade or what you might know about me.  

And then you will be asked, in a polite but firm manner, to never again conduct your exchange business on their property.

The inside of banks, casinos, and police stations are probably not your best places to conduct a trade.  Most other businesses open to the public probably wouldn't care as much.

[Edit: Here's a useful post on personal security and other concerns while conducting a face-to-face trade.

 - http://shadowlife.cc/2012/11/secure-and-professional-bitcoin-otc-exchanges/ ]
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 522
December 21, 2012, 05:43:06 PM
#25
Casinos I think are busy enough places that, as long as you aren't looking to shifty, you'd probably be ok.
Inside the casino? I wouldn't recommend that.
Why?

There's a small but not negligible risk the casino in question has a Satoshi Dice implement and you're then screwed?
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4794
December 21, 2012, 04:53:43 PM
#24
Casinos I think are busy enough places that, as long as you aren't looking to shifty, you'd probably be ok.
Inside the casino? I wouldn't recommend that.
Why?
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1010
December 21, 2012, 04:43:17 PM
#23
Casinos I think are busy enough places that, as long as you aren't looking to shifty, you'd probably be ok.

Inside the casino? I wouldn't recommend that.
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1006
December 21, 2012, 04:35:56 PM
#22
I have been doing lots of localbitcoins deals, cash face-to-face. And not a single gangster, only nerds like me.

But still, always the first question when someone hears about the idea of localbitcoins is "have you met any motorcycle-gang members" or something similar.

I'm pretty sure that when I meet the first gangster on localbitcoins.com, bitcoin is already mainstream and used by the average Joe.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4794
December 21, 2012, 03:51:12 PM
#21
. . . I imagine if you setup shop anywhere other than your own residence and sat there all day long that would be an issue Cheesy . . .
I may be wrong, but I suspect that my local coffee shop wouldn't mind.  They'd probably appreciate the added foot-traffic that could generate additional sales.

Of course the local coffee shop presents neither higher value targets, nor exceptional security.
hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
December 21, 2012, 03:41:44 PM
#20
LOL, can you imagine dealers of illegal drugs using local police stations for their handoffs for "safety".   Grin
I'd love to see the news story on that one when they eventually get caught.

A one time exchange at a bank would probably go unnoticed.  If you started setting up shop in the bank lobby with people coming to you all day long (walking over from their bank teller where they just withdrew their cash to get bitcoins from you?) you'd probably run into an issue.

The best option is to choose locations that have both:
Higher value targets, and pre-existing security/defense of the public.

Banks fit this criteria, any other suggestions?

I can swear that I have actually read a few news stories in the past where people have tried to do drug sales right in front of/near/inside police stations.

I imagine if you setup shop anywhere other than your own residence and sat there all day long that would be an issue Cheesy

For some reason I can't really imagine airports working.  People there are ultra-paranoid and on the look out for anything suspicious.  Casinos I think are busy enough places that, as long as you aren't looking to shifty, you'd probably be ok.

I also think that anywhere you'd have to pass through a "front gate" first might be nice.  I doubt a zoo would let someone just stroll through with a big baseball bat Cheesy
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4794
December 21, 2012, 03:31:57 PM
#19
The best option is to choose locations that have both:
Higher value targets, and pre-existing security/defense of the public.

Banks fit this criteria, any other suggestions?
Perhaps just outside the security line at a commercial airport?

or

Inside a casino?
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