Scammers have
found all kinds of ways to rip off people hunting for apartments via online
ads. Here's how to avoid these schemes.
Money Talk News
Related stories:
Michael Tammaro, photographer of celebrities like Tina
Fey, Courtney Cox and Kate Bosworth, pleaded guilty earlier this year to grand
larceny. He’d been accused to stealing more than $62,000 from prospective
tenants of his New York City
apartment, reported The New York Post.
How? Through a Craigslist rental scam.
If you’re shopping online for an apartment (and what hopeful
renter isn’t these days?) it’s hard to tell if those blurry photos are
just due to the landlord’s low-quality camera, or if he’s trying to hide
something. Scams are everywhere online and falling for one can cost you big.
One of Tammaro’s victims was out $25,000, authorities said.
How do you know if you’re getting a real deal or a raw one?
Knowing what scams are out there is a good place to start.
1. The 419 scheme
This scam, which has been around in one form or another
since the 1980s, became so prevalent in recent years that it merited its
own FBI website.
The name comes from a Nigerian penal code, which is often where these
“landlords” are based.
Here’s what happens: You send an email inquiring about an
apartment ad you saw online, usually with an enticingly low rent. The landlord
responds and says he’s leaving the country immediately and needs you to
wire money to an overseas location to cover the first and last month’s
rent.
The problem is, the property is not his and is not for rent,
which you find out after your money is gone.
2. The fake rental
I almost fell for this one myself. You see an ad for a nice
place, probably below the going rental rate. You send an email asking for a
showing and start getting the runaround. They can’t show you the place today
because the current tenant is still living there, it’s being repaired, or
they’re out of town, but they’re really excited to have you lease the place.
Just send a money order and it’s yours.
Turns out the apartment isn’t available for rent at all. The
“landlord” pulled the photo and information off a real estate sales website and
made a fake ad.
3. The identity thieves
You see an ad for a too-good-to-be-true apartment on
Craigslist with a hyperlink at the bottom telling you to click for more
information. When you do, you’re taken to a credit application page. If you
follow up with an email, you’re told you have to fill out the application
before you can see the place.
You do, and someone now has your Social Security number,
driver’s license number, and other important personal information. You don’t
get a new apartment, and someone else gets a new credit card in your name.
4. Another take on
the phantom apartment
It
usually goes like this: You see a great ad, no clear photos of the outside, but
the inside of the apartment looks perfect. You send off an email, but you never
get a response. But you are inundated with rent-to-own and other email spam.
5. The long-distance roommate
If
you’re simply looking for a roommate, there’s a scam for that too. Here’s
the situation: You post an ad listing the room for rent. Someone responds, you
work out the details and she sends you a check — but it’s for too
much. Your new roomie asks you to send a money order for the difference.
She needs it for moving costs, after all. You do, her check bounces,
and you’re out the cash.
Here
are a few ways to detect and avoid scams:
Research the
address. Pull up the address
online and make sure the photos and any other details in the ad match what you
find online. Ask for the address if it’s not listed in the ad.
Look for local
numbers. It’s not always the
case, but a nonlocal toll-free number may indicate a scam.
Check the WhitePages. Do a reverse phone lookup for the landlord’s number. It should
list the name and location.
Know your rental
rates. Research the rental
prices in your area. Anything too low is suspicious.
Don’t fill out
forms. You don’t need to fill
out an application before you check out a rental.
Don’t give out personal
info. Don’t give the landlord personal information until you’ve
met him in person, viewed the rental and decided to sign a lease. If you
really want to cut down on spam, set up a new email account and use a free
phone service like Google Voice to contact landlords.
Don’t send money. A landlord should be willing to meet you, show you the
apartment, and take a check in person. If they ask you to send money,
it could be a scam.
Its Great Topics ABout Screening
ReplyDeleteHere is the language she used:"Tenant shall pay to Landlord a pet deposit of five hundred dollars,
zero dollars of which shall be non-refundable"
Credit checks
Landlord credit checks
Landlord background checks