by sonline
Thu May 28, 2015 11:05 pm
I was contacted yesterday by a women on LinkedIn. She claims she is the Human Resource Manager at Sumitomo Rubber Industries located in Japan. (Her profile says that she is the CEO of the company but the header says Human Resource Manager...?)
She continues to tell me that the company would like to contract me to collect past due payments from clients in North America( where I am from) promising a high monthly salary and 5% commission on every debt I collected
.
Following this, I replied, "thank you for contacting me, I am really interested and would love to learn more about this." (not knowing about employment scams until finding this forum)
I was then asked for personal information. (Name, address, phone number, photo ID. I gave her my name, address and phone number but was hesitant to send a scan of my ID, so I did not)
I was never asked to give exact banking info, only what financial institute I was with. This is what really got me thinking. So I decided to do some more research to find out if this person was actually who they said they were.
My research found that the company she claimed to be with does actually exist. It is a multi mullion dollar company based in Japan, est. over 100 years ago with warehouses around the world. So I decided to contact the company directly to find out if this person has any connection to them.
The response I got from the company was as follows,
Thankfully I did not give any banking or credit card information as this was now an obvious scam to either get me to send money to somewhere, or to launder money for other scammers.
She continues to tell me that the company would like to contract me to collect past due payments from clients in North America( where I am from) promising a high monthly salary and 5% commission on every debt I collected
.
Following this, I replied, "thank you for contacting me, I am really interested and would love to learn more about this." (not knowing about employment scams until finding this forum)
I was then asked for personal information. (Name, address, phone number, photo ID. I gave her my name, address and phone number but was hesitant to send a scan of my ID, so I did not)
I was never asked to give exact banking info, only what financial institute I was with. This is what really got me thinking. So I decided to do some more research to find out if this person was actually who they said they were.
My research found that the company she claimed to be with does actually exist. It is a multi mullion dollar company based in Japan, est. over 100 years ago with warehouses around the world. So I decided to contact the company directly to find out if this person has any connection to them.
The response I got from the company was as follows,
" Thank you for your following inquiry. In our company, Mrs. Kim C*** does not exist. We have nothing to do with this matter, so please ignore the email from Mrs. Kim C***. Sincerely, H******* I****, Human Resources & General Affairs Dept."
Thankfully I did not give any banking or credit card information as this was now an obvious scam to either get me to send money to somewhere, or to launder money for other scammers.