|
||||||
Summer job seekers warned to be watchful for scams |
||||||
HARRISBURG - High school and college students, along with adults are warned to be on the lookout for scammers who target people looking for seasonal employment. "If a summer job seems too good to be true, it usually is," Attorney General Linda Kelly said. "Ads or online posting offer easy money for little to no work should always raise a 'red flag' for job seekers." Kelly said that some of these employment scams advertise the ability to work from home rather than an office, typically using Internet postings or Craigslist ads to offer high pay for part-time employment, including work as personal assistants, 'mystery shoppers,' check processors or models. Other questionable offers may be circulated using handmade signs posted throughout communities. "Falling for one of these bogus offers can trigger a variety of problems - leaving victims unemployed, facing financial losses and possibly becoming the target of identity thieves," Kelly said. Kelly noted that the exact details of job scams can change, but most share common themes:
Kelly urged consumers to avoid offers that ask for upfront application fees, the need to cash checks or wire-transfer funds. "As with many other scams, these offers revolve around elaborate stories that are designed to convince consumers to deposit counterfeit checks and then wire-transfer money to scam artists, who are typically located outside the United States," Kelly explained. "Victims discover they have been scammed when their banks notify them that the checks they deposited are worthless, which is often days or weeks after they have electronically transferred money to the con artists." Kelly noted that other job-related scams are crafted to gather detailed personal information about the "applicants," who may be targeted later for identity theft.
|
||||||
Return to PoconoNews.Net Home Page |
||||||