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San Diego And Nation Wide Speaker Scam
SAN DIEGO AND NATION WIDE SPEAKER SCAM
Forward this to everyone you know the only way to stop these guys is to let everyone know what is going on. Look out San Diego the speaker scam is here. In San Diego look out for two guys in a SUV Dodge Durango silver with Organ plates. They are just part of a team so look out for anyone selling a number of audio products. The brand names are Audiofile (583LR), Dogg Digital, Epiphany Audio, Pro Dynamics, and the list goes on. Here are some website to read about the scam. Also below is how the scam works don?t be caught up and taken. http://pub42.ezboard.com/faudioforum...ID=179. topic http://www.badbusinessbureau.com/res...mit2=Search%21 http://www.audioreview.com/Main,Spea...6_1594crx.aspx Unmarked vehicles (usually SUV?s or Van?s) selling speakers have been showing up on the highways and at parking lots, intersections, flea markets and similar locations from Geneva Switzerland to Portland Oregon to Sydney Australia. No city is safe; the scam preys on people with extra cash who are hoodwinked into thinking they are making a steal - perhaps even buying stolen speakers for a song - when in truth it is they who are stolen from. The pattern is strangely similar worldwide, although companies that have been contacted claim they are entirely independent. A usually two-man team aggressively tries to attract the attention of drivers who pass by. Upon corralling anyone appearing to have some disposable income, they put on a well-rehearsed routine. Often it revolves around their being installers just returning from a job and having been supplied accidentally with an extra pair of speakers they want to get rid of before returning to the warehouse. They have uniforms and show delivery invoices, business cards and even supposed reviews of the speakers from slick magazines (none of which actually exist). They may subtly give the prospective buyer the impression this is a shady deal of some sort, resulting in the bargain price. Some of the speakers look like the illustration below. The prices are listed in the invoices and reviews at $1000 or more a pair, and the driver often asks the mark what he would be willing to pay for the speakers. Buyers have paid from $200 to $1000, and sometimes the drivers request a bit of extra "beer money" for getting them such a deal. Upon getting home and hooking the speakers up, buyers quickly discover they sound terrible, but few take advantage of the three-day return policy that is U.S. law, and often the addresses or phone numbers are bogus. The feeling of investigators is that the white van speaker scam is a concerted international effort since there are so many similarities in the marketing practices. But when distributors are contacted they maintain their legitimacy. |
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