Has someone offered you a huge sum of money or a valuable consignment? It's a 419 or advance fee fraud - find out how they work, and what to do to be safe.
by 1212shepp42 Wed Apr 23, 2008 6:14 am
Welcome comments. The pitch is as follows:
International Car Tuning company is hiring! We have an exciting opening for a Company Sales Executive. Please attach your resume in DOC or reach text format and apply right now. This position is limited.

Are you looking for a rewarding and challenging career in a dynamic work environment? Do you see yourself in a fast-paced and professional atmosphere? If so, you have come to the right place.

Duties include: answer incoming calls, operate with e-mail, PDF and MS Word documents, must have good communicative skills, simple management duties.

After resume approbation you'll receive detailed job information.

This is RUSH search. If you're interested send your CV to this e-mail: [email protected]
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by ChrisSmith Wed Apr 23, 2008 6:31 am
Hi 1212shepp42


It's a cheque scam.

Any "successful applicant" will be asked to cash cheques and then send the money onto the scammer. When the cheque bounces (because it's a fraud), the successful applicant is then left to foot the whole bill.

100% scam.

You can also find it here as it's already come to the attention of other anti-scam sites.

http://www.bobbear.co.uk/page8.html

Another way to tell it's a scam is by it's poor grammar. The line that starts with "Duties include" is very poorly written. Always keep an eye out for poor spelling and grammar. Genuine companies tend to be grammatically correct. Also genuine companies don't tend to recruit by sending out unsolicited emails over the internet.

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