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TOPIC: EBAY LOVES, PROFITS FROM, AND SUPPORTS CRIME WORLDWIDE:


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RE: EBAY LOVES, PROFITS FROM, AND SUPPORTS CRIME WORLDWIDE:


another one with not only a mugshot, but a slideshow. Be sure to see that.  lmao!   laughing.gif

Firefighter Arrested After Equipment Sold On eBay

Reported by: Lance Barry
Email: lance.barry@wcpo.com
Web Produced By: Alyssa Bunn
Last Update: 5:38 am

Slideshow

(HCSO)
A Cincinnati firefighter is under arrest for allegedly arranging to sell city-owned fire equipment on eBay.

It's a story 9News broke.

Police arrested 34-year-old Eric Bacon of Mt. Washington early Wednesday morning after serving a search warrant on his home.

Bacon works at station number 16 on Spring Grove Avenue in Camp Washington.  He is accused of stealing the equipment and giving it to his girlfriend to sell on the popular online auction site.

According to police, the stolen items include a hose nozzle and a vindicator ball.

Bacon's girlfriend, 27-year-old Angela Smith, has also been arrested.  Police say she sold the items on eBay from the home they share together.

Both are expected in court later Wednesday morning.  He is facing a felony theft charge, Smith is facing two counts of receiving stolen property.


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again, no word on what ebay did with IT's cut...


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Man pleads guilty to selling counterfeit goods


SEATTLE - A former Oak Harbor man pleaded guilty to selling counterfeit exercise equipment and housewares worth more than $2 million.

Counterfeit Bowflex exercise equipment, Magic Bullet blenders, DVDs and North Face backpacks were found at an operation run by 28-year-old Brian Pollee, who was selling fake goods on eBay under the name ZMP Enterprises.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement shut down the operation.


The feds say for three years, Polee imported the knockoffs from China and sold them on eBay to unsuspecting customers, raking in more than $2.1 million.


WATCH THE REPORT: Man pleads guilty to selling counterfeit goods


"Counterfeiting affects almost any successful brand in the world, from clothing to jewelry to exercise equipment, any successful brand is the target of a counterfeiter. Anything they can sell to make money," said Dep. Special Agent In Charge Brad Bench.

Polee's enterprise began unraveling last April when federal agents intercepted more than $750,000 worth of counterfeit goods at the Port of Tacoma.


"In this case we seized over 70 containers of counterfeit goods we estimate the value to be over $4 million," said Bench.


Bench says counterfeiting exposes consumers to poor quality goods or toxic chemicals like lead paint.


"Consumers can protect themselves by buying from authorized dealers and then if a deal is too good to be true, it probably is," he said.


In addition to prison time, Polee will have to forfeit a 2003 Cadillac, a 2000 Jaguar and $30,000.


Illegal use of trademarks is a violation of intellectual property rights law.


Counterfeiting costs U.S. industries $250 billion and 750,000 jobs each year.



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eBay conman sold fake soccer tops


A conman has admitted duping about 200 people into buying fake football shirts on internet auction site eBay.

Flintshire magistrates heard how Paul Davies, 34, from Mold, imported the shirts from Thailand and charged between £20 and £43 for them.


They included bogus David Beckham, Christian Ronaldo, Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United merchandise.


Davies admitted four fraud charges, six trademark offences, obtaining money by deception and will be sentenced later.


Another 193 similar charges are to be taken into consideration and District Judge Andrew Shaw said the case was so serious Davies would be dealt with at crown court.


Huw Evans, prosecuting, said Davies had four eBay accounts and between September 2006 and March 2008 offered clothes for sale which he claimed were made by Adidas, Nike and Puma.


However, an investigation was launched by Flintshire trading standards officials and North Wales Police following complaints.


Davies will now be the subject of a specialist financial investigation under The Proceeds of Crime Act.


Huw Roberts, defending, said his client's wife was from Thailand and Davies had a contact in Bangkok who sold him fake shirts.


Davies was bailed pending sentence next month, on condition that he does not leave the UK or apply for travel documents.


The judge said: "It was planned, commercial crime."

-----------------------------------------

No word on what eb did with IT's share          confuse biggrin

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UVa police use eBay, tech to charge 3 in theft cases


ByThe Daily Progress Staff
Published: February 14, 2009


Technology helped University of Virginia police make three arrests in theft cases this week.


In one case, using eBay led them to a UVa student who police say stole bicycles and tried to sell them on the Web site.


UVa police were looking into the thefts of two students' bicycles when one of the victims noticed what appeared to be his bike for sale on eBay, according to Lt. Melissa Fielding.


Police then searched the residence of Charles John Neil Jr. and found more than $4,000 worth of stolen bicycles and bike parts, Fielding said.


They charged Neil with two counts of grand larceny and one count of possessing burglary tools, all felonies.


Neil was released on $1,500 bond.


He is scheduled to appear in Charlottesville General District Court on March 26.


In the second case, a Charlottesville man faces multiple charges related to burglary and fraud incidents that happened on Grounds between November and January.


Police said Joshua Alan Lafferty is connected to 10 thefts in which property with a total worth of more than $10,000 was stolen. They say he stole from academic buildings, making off with such items as computers, computer hardware, digital cameras, purses, wallets and credit cards.


Police arrested Lafferty after they were alerted to the use of a stolen computer on the university's information technology communication system, Fielding said.


The 25-year-old Lafferty faces six counts each of breaking and entering and grand larceny; four counts of credit card theft; and one count of credit card fraud.


He is being held without bond, and is scheduled to appear in Albemarle County Circuit Court on Feb. 26.


In the third case, another student has found herself in trouble with the law after police tracked her down through a stolen iPod, according to Fielding.


A UVa student's iPod was stolen from Clemons Library on Sunday, Fielding said.


The victim had registered the device with the university's information technology and communication system, and that led police to Taylor Cavanaugh Critz.


They found the 19-year-old with the stolen iPod, Fielding said. She faces a charge of petty larceny.


Critz was released on $1,500 bond and is scheduled to appear in the county's General District Court on Thursday.



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Missing canoes turn up on Ebay


6:40pm Saturday 21st February 2009

By Will Roberts »

TWO canoes that disappeared after their owners ran into trouble while out on the River Tees have been found for sale on Ebay.


On September 6 six canoeists went out on a rain-swollen Tees but three of the group capsized near Winston, County Durham.


All of the group escaped from the accident unhurt after police, ambulance and fire crews came to their rescue.


But two of the canoes, worth a total of £2,400 were later spotted being loaded on the top of a car further downstream.


More than five months later, one of the owners of the canoes spotted them for sale on internet auction site Ebay.


They contacted the police, who traced the seller, who claimed to have found the kayaks.


The man, from Crook, County Durham, has been given a police caution and the two canoes have been returned to their owners.



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Judge denies appeal in shoplifting ring





Eds: APNewsNow

FARGO, N.D. (AP) A federal judge says a man convicted in an Internet shoplifting ring cannot appeal an order to pay a penalty.

David Soldier, of Moorhead, Minn., was sentenced to more than two years in prison and ordered to forfeit $50,000 for his role in a conspiracy to sell stolen goods. Soldier appealed the fine, saying it was excessive.

U.S. District Judge Ralph Erickson says the federal law cited in the appeal does not allow Soldier to challenge the forfeiture order. Erickson says even if it did, there's no evidence the fine was out of line.

Authorities say Soldier and Michelle Kartes sold between $200,000 and $400,000 worth of stolen goods on the Internet auction eBay. Kartes was sentenced to two years in prison and ordered to pay $50,000.

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Edit:
No word on what eb did with IT's share of that 200-400 $K

biggrin.gif

-- Edited by budnonymous at 07:35, 2009-02-24

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$10,000 in stolen property found

Thursday, February 26, 2009
By CHERIE WARD

Jackson County sheriff's deputies arrested two men Wednesday after searching their apartment and finding thousands of dollars' worth of stolen merchandise from numerous Books-A-Million stores.

Joseph Pickens Stallworth, director of Singing River Services' two drug and alcohol rehabilitation centers, and Gipson Austin Arthur were charged with felony possession of stolen property. Both men are from Moss Point.

Jackson County Sheriff Mike Byrd said he believes the pair was selling stolen audio and hardback books on the Web site eBay, and he expects more charges to follow.

Byrd said Stallworth, 57, and Arthur, 59, were arrested at about 1 a.m. Wednesday after investigators found about $10,000 worth of items they said are from Books-A-Million stores in Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana.

Byrd said Stallworth would not let investigators into his apartment in the

3400 block of Dantzler Street in Moss Point.

"Forcible entry was made by knocking the door off the hinges," the sheriff said.

Byrd said Monday that a Books-A-Million security investigator witnessed Arthur stealing items from an Alabama Books-A-Million store and followed Arthur for two days.

"Over a two-day period he was able to follow Arthur to several other stores in Mississippi and Louisiana and back to the apartment," Byrd said.

He added that sheriff's investigators believe Stallworth and Arthur have been stealing merchandise and selling it online for several months.

"The investigation is ongoing, so we're not sure how long it's been taking place," he said. "We know it began in 2008, we're just not sure when."

Stallworth oversees the Stevens Center and McClamroch Center. Both are drug and alcohol rehabilitation centers in Pascagoula.

His arrest stunned his co-workers and supervisors Wednesday.

"I'm just as shocked as I can be," said Sherman Blackwell, director of Singing River Services.

Blackwell said he's waiting anxiously to see how Stallworth's role in the alleged incident develops before making any decisions about Stallworth's employment.

Stallworth has worked at the facility for more than five years, Blackwell said.

Stallworth and Arthur were in the Jackson County Adult Detention Center on Wednesday afternoon awaiting an initial hearing.



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Motorcycle thief confesses to plans to strip stolen cycle

February 24, 2009
A motorcycle thief confessed to police that he was going to strip the parts off a stolen 2007 Suzuki GSXR 750, buy a new frame -- which would come with a valid title -- from eBay, then reassemble the stolen parts on it.

Anthony Rodriguez, 21, of Gary, was stopped around 1:30 a.m. Saturday for going 55 miles per hour in a 40 mph zone at U.S. 12 and Hilcrest Road in Ogden Dunes. When Ogden Dunes Officer Robert Post discovered there was a civil warrant for Rodriguez's arrest, he began asking about the motorcycle in the bed of his 2001 Ford Sport Trac.

According to the police report, Rodriguez originally said the bike belonged to a friend in Chesterton and he was taking it home to store it as a favor. When the person he named was contacted and said he did not own a motorcycle, Rodriguez made his confession.

Chesterton Police then found the motorcycle's owner to tell him of the theft of the $12,000 bike from his garage.



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From The Consumerist:
More proof that ebay is not a safe or trustworthy place to buy and/or sell

eBay Scammer Says PC "Destroyed" In Mail, Takes $500, Sends Back

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Web designer faked own death over eBay scam

A web designer faked his own death in an attempt to avoid being apprehended for a £25,000 eBay scam.

By Nigel Bunyan
Last Updated: 7:52PM GMT 02 Mar 2009


 

Jason Hart, 33, claimed he had died from a brain haemorrhage after internet customers emailed him to demand the goods they had paid for.

These included tickets to concerts and sporting events, mobile phones, watches and computers. Some of Hart's victims had paid him as much as £5,000 for items they never received.

Hart, from Bolton, Greater Manchester, sent his local newspaper a fake obituary, which he then used to convince victims of his scam that he had died.

According to the article, his parents had chosen Angels, by Robbie Williams, to be played at his funeral.

At the time the Harts were on holiday in the Dominican Republic, oblivious to the news of their son's supposed death.

Hart resorted to yet more lies when it became apparent that he was still alive.

He claimed at the time that he had been visited by three people offering their condolences to his parents.

"When I answered the door, they went as white as a sheet," he told reporters. "Whoever is responsible for this must be really sick. My family have seen it and they are very upset.

"I find it shocking that someone can do this. I am alive and well and never felt better."

Hart, who has previous convictions for deception, admitted perjury and conspiracy to defraud and was jailed for two years.

Passing sentence at Bolton Crown Court, Judge Steven Everett told him: "It is clear that you are a dishonest and manipulative individual."

He said Hart had found it easy to carry out the fraud. When the complaints began to mount up, he told a "pack of lies" in an attempt to avoid detection.

Hart, whose 28 victims came from both Britain and overseas, used most of their money to buy a car, holiday vouchers and other gifts for his then girlfriend, Louise Gregory, 27, a nurse.

Gregory admitted acquiring criminal property at an earlier hearing. She was ordered to complete a 12-month community order and pay £500 costs.

Alexandra Simmonds, for Hart, described her client as "a rather inadequate person" who had never left his parents' home. He was emotionally fragile and lacking in self-esteem.



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MoCo police want more stringent laws for selling on eBay

By Examiner Staff Writer
3/2/09

Montgomery County police want to strengthen county laws to make it harder to sell stolen goods on eBay - a move some merchants selling through online auctions said wasn't needed.

Police and the county's Office of Consumer Protection are supporting proposed legislation that would require eBay retailers - individuals or businesses that sell customers goods on the online auction site for a fee - to report their merchandise to police in the same way pawnbrokers do.

Under current county law, pawnbrokers have to report all their transactions to police and hold items for a certain period of time.

Police said the law, which was written in the early 1980s, has been helpful in recovering stolen items but needs to be updated to keep pace with technology.

"We are trying to catch criminals with pencils and paper instead of computers and technology and our citizens are being hurt," Montgomery County Chief of Police J. Thomas Manger wrote to the county council.

But treating eBay sellers like licensed pawnbrokers "would force many small Internet businesses to close down" Michael Hadad, the owner of an iSold It on eBay franchise in Gaithersburg, said in a letter to the council.

Hadad said his company provides a valuable service to individuals who don't have access to the Internet, and also puts money back into the community.

Hadad said the eBay is "safe and transparent" and "a very unlikely outlet for stolen property."  The online auction site already requires that sellers post much of the information the county currently requires from pawnbrokers, including pictures of the items, and model and serial numbers, Hadad said.

David Cohen, owner of another eBay seller, Soeztosell4u, said he sells mostly collectibles and knick-knacks and doubts thieves would try to use his services.

"I have not seen a problem whatsoever," he said.

But Manger said that it's "impossible" for police to know whether stolen items are being sold by eBay sellers unless they report what items they are selling.

Manger said the proposed legislation, which would also lengthen the period sellers have to hold on to items from 18 to 30 days and prohibit children from selling items, is important "given the inevitable crime-rate increases that are likely to occur because of the recent economic slowdown."

A County Council committee is scheduled to discuss the proposed legislation March 19.

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Friends of Ours

Combating Organized Retail Crime Act

February 26, 2009

Organized Retail Crime

Three bills have been introduced in Congress to address "the growing criminal activity known as organized retail crime (ORC)":

ORC involves sophisticated crime rings that move from store to store stealing large quantities of goods. The stolen merchandise is then sold, often to unknowing customers, through flea markets, swap meets, pawn shops and, increasingly, on Internet auction sites. Tens of billions of dollars of merchandise is stolen annually by these criminals. * * * Because of widely varying state laws and the lack of a clear federal criminal statute addressing ORC, gangs who move from store to store stealing thousands of dollars of merchandise are often only subject to minor misdemeanor charges. * * * ORC jeopardizes the health and well-being of consumers, communities and businesses by exposing innocent consumers to potentially tampered or tainted goods; robs states of billions in sales tax revenue, and costs retailers tens of billions of dollars each year. Furthermore organized retail criminals often use the profits from ORC to fund other crimes.

About the bills:

The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2009 introduced by Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) and co-sponsored by Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) would clarify existing law to give law enforcement the tools to fight ORC, require on-line and off-line market places to investigate suspicious sales, and place basic disclosure requirements on on-line marketplaces.

The Organized Retail Crime Act of 2009 HR 1173, introduced by Congressman Brad Ellsworth (D-IN) and co-sponsored by Congressman Jim Jordan (R-OH) would amend federal criminal code, making it illegal to engage in activities that further organized retail crime. To deter illegal activities of organized retail criminals, it would also impose specific and narrow obligations upon on-line marketplaces known to be used by high-volume sellers of stolen merchandise.

The E-Fencing Enforcement Act of 2009 HR 1166, introduced by Congressman Bobby Scott (D-VA) is a carefully tailored bill that tackles the selling of stolen goods on-line, the bill would address ORC by imposing reasonable duties on on-line marketplaces to collect information that law enforcement can in turn use to prosecute those that fence goods on their websites. The bill requires that on-line marketplaces halt the sale of goods on websites if the goods are determined to be stolen.



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Police uncover '$4.5m eBay scam'

By Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop

Posted March 10, 2009 16:41:00
Updated March 10, 2009 18:23:0

A Sydney man has been charged over an alleged multi-million-dollar international credit card racket operating on shopping websites.

Sydney police say they have uncovered a syndicate that has been stealing people's credit card details to buy $4.5 million worth of electronic goods, tools and luxury wine.

Assistant Commissioner Catherine Burn says the group sold the items on eBay and other shopping websites for about a third of the price over at least the past two years.

"It's well organised in the sense that we're dealing with innocent people who are being defrauded and then being duped as well," she said.

Officers say they discovered the alleged racket after being told retail gift cards were being sold at discount prices on eBay about a month ago.

They say they soon found the group was operating in a number of countries and selling TVs, laptops, cameras, GPS devices, power tools and mp3 players.

This morning, police raided properties at Rydalmere, Concord, Croydon and Marrickville, in western Sydney, and a post office at Summer Hill, where they say some of the items were awaiting postage.

They arrested a 27-year-old man and charged him this afternoon with four counts of knowingly dealing with the proceeds of crime. He will be kept in custody overnight to face court tomorrow.

A 30-year-old man was arrested in Rydalmere and is still being questioned.

Assistant Commissioner Burn says police seized a number of items today, including computers, steam cleaners and dozens of bottles of wine worth $700 each. Officers also allegedly found several fake credit cards and drivers' licences.

The Assistant Commissioner says it will take a long time for the international investigation to smash the ring and find its victims.

"The issue is that there's a lot of legitimate credit card holders whose credit card numbers have potentially been used to obviously purchase these goods," she said.

"Obviously we'll be investigating now. It's going to take a long time now to actually track all this down but we are working with eBay. Ebay has been assisting us, as have banks.

"It's a large syndicate and it has large tentacles and we've at least uncovered it."

She is urging possible victims of the alleged scam and anyone who has information that could help detectives to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

"It's absolutely imperative," she said.

Police say eBay has barred the syndicate from selling any more goods on its website.



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eBay baby formula deal brings five years' probation

A Papillion man accused of not fulfilling orders for baby formula on eBay was sentenced to probation Monday.

Sarpy County District Judge Max Kelch sentenced Joseph A. Boylan, 33, to five years' probation. He was charged with one count of felony theft by deception. He could have faced up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Papillion Police Detective Kevin Covi has said Boylan was offering Neocate - a formula for babies who can't tolerate milk and soy protein - for about half the retail cost on eBay.

Boylan was arrested in May after complaints that he had collected more than $22,000 from 45 people in Chile, Mexico, Canada and the U.S. but never shipped their formula.

Covi has said Boylan made several deliveries after he began selling formula in August of 2007, but stopped fulfilling orders that November.

Covi has said Papillion police got involved after several customers complained to PayPal, and PayPal was unable to resolve the issue with Boylan. PayPal refunded money to some customers, Covi has said.


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Man charged with stealing boat propellers and selling them on eBay

A St. Charles County man has been charged with stealing dozens of boat propellers and selling them on eBay, after two men noticed listings that described propellers recently stolen from them.

ST. LOUIS -

A St. Charles County man has been charged with stealing dozens of boat propellers and selling them on eBay, after two men noticed listings that described propellers recently stolen from them.

Mike Bullock and Matthew Hahn told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in Wednesday's edition that propellers were swiped from their boats around Thanksgiving.

When they saw the eBay seller had an address in the St. Louis suburb of O'Fallon, they were sure they had the thief.

"There was no doubt in my mind," said Hahn, 49, of St. Peters.

Bullock e-mailed the seller to see if he could pick up a propeller in person to save on shipping. Hahn placed a winning bid and inquired about payment. The seller e-mailed them back separately, telling them he had already sold them elsewhere.

"That's when we said, 'No, something's not right here,' " said Bullock, 54, of St. Peters.

They called authorities and provided the crucial tip that led to the arrest of a man police say stole at least two dozen boat propellers in St. Charles County over the past three years.

Rick Howren, 45, has been charged with 12 counts of felony stealing in thefts from residential neighborhoods of O'Fallon.

Police say Howren, a construction site inspector for the Missouri Department of Transportation, would steal propellers at night from boats parked in driveways and sell them on eBay.

Howren admitted to police he stole an estimated 40 propellers in the area, according to court records. He was released after posting bail. He has no criminal record in Missouri. His lawyer, Jeff Sandcork, declined to comment Wednesday, saying he's still learning the details of the accusations.

Propellers, which typically sell for hundreds of dollars, can be removed in seconds and generally lack serial numbers or other identifying features.

Some boat stores refuse to buy large numbers of used propellers, because they often believe they're stolen.

advertising

Howren, who stored his own boat at the Riverbend Marina in northern St. Charles County for the past three years, is being investigated for at least four recent thefts there and at the nearby Two Branch Marina, where Bullock and Hahn keep their boats.

Riverbend recently terminated Howren's access to the marina, said co-owner Debbie House. She said she had been monitoring Howren's eBay account and told authorities she had noticed a listing for a propeller similar to one stolen from Riverbend

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Police: Couple sold stolen items on eBay

Comments

March 12, 2009

ELGIN -- A St. Charles couple is accused of stealing thousands of dollars worth of construction merchandise from a local home improvement store and then selling at least some of it on eBay.

Laramie Pitzen, 24, and Paul Head, 26, both of 1758 Wessel Court, each were charged with felony theft by Elgin police this week.

They are accused of taking merchandise worth $2,468.62 from the Menard's store on Randall Road in Elgin. Police said the merchandise consisted of copper and brass fittings plus a variety of thermostats, which the couple then put up for sale on the eBay Internet auction site.

Pitzen told authorities the couple was having a hard time making ends meet and had stolen merchandise from four to five other Menard's stores recently, according to testimony at a bond hearing Wednesday. She said they made between $2,500 and $3,000 from the eBay sales within the last month, according to the testimony.

Police said Head has a prior arrest on a retail theft charge but that Pitzen had no prior arrests. Each had bail set at $10,000 Wednesday on the felony theft charge.

Elgin Deputy Police Chief Jeff Swoboda said it is rare for local police to come across Internet crime such as this.

The only recent case Elgin detectives could recall was a stolen pager seen on eBay, Swoboda said, adding there was an arrest made in that case as well.

Swoboda said items the St. Charles couple is accused of selling are harder to trace because, unlike the pager, copper fittings have no serial identification numbers.

Although online accounts are easy to trace back to the original computer the account was set up on, online theft is not typical, Swoboda said.

"Generally, when people steal things, they just sell them to individuals with cash," he said. "A person needs a little bit of technical expertise to go online and do this."

Swoboda said Elgin police are still investigating the Menard's case.

"Any time we get information that there are stolen items being exchanged, we are going to continue the investigation," he said. "We are going to continue investigating this case even though we have made an arrest, and we will be following up on this with eBay."





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03/20/09 06:48 AM

Stolen golf driver sold on eBay; suspect charged


-Using eBay to sell a stolen item proved to be the downfall of a Depew man accused of stealing two drivers from the Wehrle Golf Dome's pro shop in Clarence last weekend.

Pro shop workers told state police that a man came into the shop twice Saturday, each time putting a $399 driver down his pant leg before leaving the store.

The next day, workers at the pro shop spotted one of their drivers for sale on eBay, noticing the pro shop's UPC code in the photo. The pro shop posted the winning bid, and Trooper Ronald Nero arranged a face-to-face meeting for the exchange.



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Teacher in eBay football top scam

A Flintshire teacher who duped 200 people into buying fake football shirts on the auction website eBay has received a suspended prison sentence.

Paul Davies, 34, of Mold, admitted four charges of fraud and one count of obtaining money by deception - with 196 offences taken into consideration.

He was sentenced to 52 weeks in jail, suspended for 18 months, and he was ordered to do 200 hours unpaid work.

Mold Crown Court heard among those sold were David Beckham shirts.

He also sold Cristiano Ronaldo tops and replica Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur shirts, claiming they were genuine.

However, they were all counterfeit and had been imported by Davies from Thailand, the court heard.

'Financial loss'

A specialist financial investigation will now be launched under the Proceeds of Crime Act, which has the power to seize money made illegally.

Debra White, prosecuting, said Davies, a father-of-two, had been working as an English teacher in Thailand and made about £5,000 from the venture.

Sentencing Davies, Judge Dafydd Hughes said: "What you have done is cheat a large number of people and companies.

"Individuals thought that they were buying the genuine article but they were not.

"They were false, they were counterfeit and sadly these people were deceived and suffered a financial loss."

Miss White said Davies had four eBay accounts and between September 2006 and March last year advertised various soccer shirts for sale by auction.

The court heard people paid between £20 and £43 by for the shirts.

Nic Parry, defending, said Davies was now working in the UK.

A reference showed he was highly thought of, but he would lose his job if he was jailed.



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Ex-TSA worker admits stealing from luggage at Newark Liberty International Airport

by Joe Ryan/The Star-Ledger

Friday March 20, 2009, 7:11 AM

A former Transportation Security Administration baggage screener pleaded guilty Thursday to stealing cameras, electronics and other items from checked luggage at Newark Liberty International Airport.

Pythias Brown, 47, of Maplewood, said in U.S. District Court in Trenton that in 2007 and 2008 he took video cameras and equipment, jewelry, laptop computers, GPS systems, cell phones, electronic games and more. All told, he took more than 100 items worth a total of between $200,000 and $400,000, authorities said.

(photo caption) ->>In a 2007 file photo, a passenger walks past Terminal C of Newark LIberty International Airport in Newark.

Brown said he sold the items on eBay, the online auction site. And that was his undoing.

In 2008, he allegedly swiped camera equipment belonging to cameramen from CNN and HBO who had checked baggage with Continental Airlines while flying from Newark.

The CNN employee noticed the stolen equipment for sale on eBay. Investigators traced it to Brown, authorities said.

Then agents with the Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General bid on the camera. They won, and Brown was caught on a surveillance camera at a UPS kiosk in Newark mailing the items to the undercover agents, authorities said.

The HBO cameraman's equipment showed up on eBay, too, authorities said.

But instead of bidding, investigators obtained a warrant to search Brown's house in October. They found the camera and lenses -- worth about $47,900 -- plus 66 cameras, 31 laptops, 20 cell phones, 17 sets of electronic games, 13 pieces of jewelry, 12 GPS systems, 11 MP3 players, eight camera lenses, six video cameras and two DVD players.

Lara Uselding, a TSA spokeswoman, said the administration has no tolerance for theft. Any employee caught breaking the law will be fired, she said.

"The misdeeds of this individual in no way reflect the dedication and hard work of the hundreds of Security Officers who do an excellent job each day for the passengers at Newark Liberty International Airport," Uselding said.

Since Brown's arrest, the TSA has enacted several new policies, she said. Screeners are no longer allowed to bring their own bags into luggage areas. They must store all personal items in lockers outside the screening area. And and roving patrols of inspectors now randomly search search airport employees, Uselding said.

Brown pleaded guilty to theft from a commercial interstate carrier and faces up to 10 years in federal prison and a maximum fine of $250,000. U.S. District Judge Peter G. Sheridan also ordered Brown to repay his victims.

The judge scheduled sentencing for June 22

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Celine Dion tickets land postwoman in court

A PAIR of mail order Celine Dion concert tickets was intercepted by a Burton postwoman and sold on eBay by her partner, a court has heard.

The tickets fetched £210 in the online auction, but the couple who bought them were turned away at the door of the NEC in Birmingham because they had been reported missing and cancelled.

Nick Burn, prosecuting, told Stafford Crown Court that the concert tickets and tickets for a memorabilia event were intercepted by Royal Mail employee Stephanie Appleby.

Both were then put up for auction on eBay by her partner, Glyn Hodgins.

Mr Burn said the Celine Dion tickets were reported missing around a year ago by the intended recipients and they were voided.

Mr Turner bought them from Hodgins on eBay, but when he and his wife got to the NEC they were refused entry and had to purchase another pair of tickets to see the show.

Mr Turner's complaints via e-mail to Hodgins were brushed off and he alerted the police. During the investigation it was discovered that Appleby had also intercepted tickets for a memorabilia event and Hodgins had sold those on eBay for £28.

When questioned, Hodgins told the police he bought and sold things on eBay to make himself 'a bit of pocket money'. Appleby made no comment.

Appleby, 23, and Hodgins, 32, of Queen's Court, Branston, both admitted two charges of fraud and Appleby also admitted interfering with the mail.

She was given a four-month prison sentence, suspended for 18 months, with 120 hours' unpaid community work. Her partner got six months' jail, suspended for 18 months, with 200 hours' unpaid community work.

The couple were also ordered to pay £660 costs each and a total of £400 compensation to Geoffrey Turner, who bought the Celine Dion tickets.

Judge Paul Glenn told the defendants: "This was a gross breach of trust. The public rely on the postal services to perform their duty.

"Having defrauded Mr and Mrs Turner, you led them a merry dance, showing a brazen attitude to their complaints.

"It seems to be accepted Hodgins was the prime mover, but you, Appleby, were the one working for the Post Office and you benefited financially. I am not impressed by the fact that you haven't had the decency to notify your new employers, you have also chosen not to tell your family. It will be far worse if they find out through the Press.

"Hodgins, at least you had the guts to accept the offences were initiated by you. You are in full-time employment, there is plainly a different side to you."


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Will testify against co-defendants

GOSHEN - A former police officer Wednesday copped a plea-bargain and agreed to testify against five co-defendants in what prosecutors describe as a million-dollar scam that targeted two Wal-Mart stores in Orange County.
Kevin Burchell, 27, of Montgomery, pleaded guilty in Orange County Court to four felonies: two counts of first-degree offering a false instrument for filing and two counts of filing a false tax return.


The charges cover income that Burchell received from eBay sales of Wal-Mart goods. He didn't report the income on his taxes, but investigators from the Orange County District Attorney's Office tracked it through subpoenaed electronic records, according to court documents.
In exchange for his cooperation and court testimony in any upcoming trials, Burchell faces a maximum of six months in county jail and five years' probation. But he could avoid jail entirely "if justice so requires," Assistant District Attorney Karen Edelman-Reyes told Judge Jeffrey Berry.


"He is prepared to cooperate, has cooperated thus far and is prepared to continue that cooperation," said Burchell's lawyer, Martin Goldberg.
Burchell is the second person to publicly admit his role in the scam. In all, six people have been arrested since Nov. 4, accused of stealing everything from DVD players to 5-pound bags of ice melt.


On Nov. 5, the night after he was arrested, Burchell was fired from his job as a probationary police officer in the Village of Tuxedo Park. He joined Tuxedo Park in May 2008, two years after he was discharged from the City of Newburgh police department on his last day of probation.
Burchell appeared in court a few hours after another former officer, Nick Valastro, who resigned from the Town of Montgomery department on March 5, after he was implicated in the Wal-Mart scam.


Valastro was arraigned Wednesday on a misdemeanor charge of official misconduct. His lawyer, Ben Greenwald, said he expects Valastro to plead guilty on April 16.


Clifford Barber III, a part-time Town of Montgomery cop and the alleged ringleader of the group, is due in County Court Thursday. Prosecutors have offered him 3 1/3 to 10 years in prison in exchange for a guilty plea that would avoid a trial; Judge Robert Freehill has indicated he'd cap the sentence at less than that, but he hasn't been precise about the number of years.


Burchell will be sentenced on June 30. He's free on $2,000 bail.
Bryan Dunn, whose role in the scam cost him his post as an assistant fire chief in Maybrook, pleaded guilty earlier this month.


The case was investigated by the Orange County District Attorney's Office and the state Department of Taxation and Finance. In addition to the criminal cases, there's a civil forfeiture proceeding pending in state Supreme Court, which would allow prosecutors to take $1 million worth of property from the accused to satisfy a civil judgment.



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Police: Pink Slip Led Man To Sell Stolen Hubcaps

Koompone Arrested On Burglary Charges

POSTED: 4:10 pm EDT March 26, 2009
UPDATED: 6:02 am EDT March 27, 2009

The slumping economy may have driven an Altamonte Springs man to take drastic measures.

Jard Koompone, 48, was arrested and accused of setting up an online service to sell the stolen wheel covers.When police were called to a parking lot for a complaint against skateboarding teens, they saw a man peeling out of the lot and followed him.They caught up to Koompone and noticed he was throwing wheel covers into a Dumpster."Apparently because of the economy, he had started stealing hubcaps.

He had lost his job so he was stealing hubcaps and selling them on eBay," Tim Hyer of the Altamonte Springs Police Department said.When police searched the Koompone's home, they found hubcaps and wheel covers everywhere. He had them stashed in the closets, stuffed in cabinets, and even found some stacked in the fridge, authorities said.

After Koompone was arrested is when he filled investigators in on how he had just lost his job and needed money."He estimated he was selling $4,000 a month selling hubcaps on eBay," Hyer said.

Police are now stuck with more than 100 wheel covers in evidence -- all from Toyotas and VWs.Anyone who thinks they may have been one of Koompoone's victims should contact Altamonte Springs police to try to get their hubcaps back.If you think you may have been a victim, contact police. You could get your missing items back.

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March 24, 2009
By: Timothy Kirn
For The VIN News Service



When Ginny Weimer bought two IV pumps on eBay, one for about $120 and another for $140, she thought she was getting a steal. Little did she know how true that was ( Message Boards Link ).

The pumps worked fine for a while and that was great, said Weimer, a veterinary technician who works for a practice in Whitewater, Wisc. But then one of the units began to smoke, and it wasn't even plugged into an outlet. 

So Weimer called the manufacturer to see if it could be repaired. The company representative asked for the serial number of the unit, then put her on hold. When the representative came back on the line, Weimer was told that the company would have to get back to her.

In retrospect, that was the first and only clue that something was wrong, Weimer said, until following day, when a New Jersey police detective made things abundantly clear.

The detective called Weimer and told her that both units were stolen from a human hospital in Jersey City. Weimer's practice had to surrender the units.

While eBay does not release figures on how often stolen goods are auctioned at the site, the Internet and newspapers are rife with stories, which makes it seem as though scams and larceny are commonplace.

A few years ago, there were a number of articles about different groups that would steal items from retail stores, return them without a receipt to receive a gift card and then sell the gift card online at a discount. That activity forced eBay in 2003 to impose limits on the amount and frequency of gift card sales. Nowadays, a seller can auction off just one card worth no more than $500 in a week.

More recently, police in Australia arrested two men who are accused of using fraudulent credit cards to purchase items, which were then resold on Internet sites such as eBay, to the tune of $4.5 million Australian.

The sale of stolen goods on the Internet is enough of a problem that the U.S. Congress is considering three different bills, each designed to make such sales a federal crime.

eBay spokeswoman Nichola Sharpe, however, said that the online auction site, which works with police when cases of theft arise, encounters no more of a problem than traditional retailers and resellers, and it might even be less because the auctions are so visible.

"eBay is probably one of the worst places to sell stolen goods because everyone can see it," she said.

Buyers who use the online payment system PayPal also can be protected, Sharpe noted. PayPal, which is owned by eBay, features a service known as PayPal Buyer Protection, which allows a buyer to recover funds if a seller does not deliver or misrepresents an item. Buyers also can get a refund if a PayPal investigation team finds an item was misrepresented, damaged or stolen.

Weimer, in the meantime, is not dissuaded from eBay. She recently bought another pump from the online auction site for $96. She also wrote to the hospital where the first pumps were stolen, citing interest in getting the pumps back if the hospital was not going to use them once the police investigation concludes.


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A clerk at the Elkridge Post Office has been indicted for stealing thousands of dollars worth of stamps, which an accomplice then sold on eBay.

Marvin Lamont Foster, of Rosedale, was indicted and charged with theft after a videotape showed him rifling through boxes at the Elkridge Post Office at 2:10 a.m. Dec. 4, 2008 and allegedly stealing $7,560 worth of stamps, according to the indictment.

It was one of several incidents in which Foster was caught taking stamps, according to the indictment, which noted that since January 2007, the post office has lost approximately $498,000 in stamps.

Stamps stolen by Foster were sold on eBay by Kyle Mathias, of Joppa, according to the indictment.

Between 2000 and Jan. 8, 2009, Mathias sold $676,264 in merchandise on his eBay account, the indictment found, including postage stamps.

Both Foster and Mathias were arrested March 18 and later released under the supervision of federal pretrial officials. A preliminary hearing has been set for April 16.

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Lower Moreland

(snippet)

Fraud ... A resident of the 9900 block of Sandy Road contacted police March 12 at 4:01 p.m. after discovering that he may have been the victim of Internet fraud, police said.
The resident, who runs an online business selling parts for Porsche's said he sold a $250 part to someone in November, police said, adding that he waited to receive payment and then shipped the part.
The resident received a notice on March 10 that the money from the sale had been removed from his PayPal account because the transaction is under investigation, police said. 


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29 March 2009
EXCLUSIVE AIRPORT SECURITY SCANDAL
She got £95 for £1,000 watch
By Gareth Morgan

A security manager at Heathrow Airport has been sacked for taking lost property to flog on eBay.

Roberta Gordon, 36, is alleged to have helped herself to items left behind by first class passengers at X-ray scanners in Terminal 5.

It is believed she collected designer jewellery, cosmetics and electrical goods over several months and sold them on the auction site.

A source said: "She told me she sold a watch worth around £1,000 for just £95. She said she kept iPods for herself or gave them away as gifts."

Gordon accepted an official police caution for theft - meaning she accepted her guilt. She is thought to be appealing against her dismissal.

The source added: "Roberta worked in the first class departures security area and rubbed shoulders with celebrities like George Clooney and Stevie Wonder. She loved her job. But last October she started bragging that she was helping herself to things that passengers had either left behind or had confiscated."

Gordon, of Shepperton, Middlesex, was employed by the British Airports Authority and started work at Terminal 5 from January 2008.

She studied politics and philosophy at Liverpool University and was once a travel firm's tour rep.

A baa spokesman said: "Ms Gordon is no longer an employee."

A Metropolitan Police spokesman confirmed: "A woman was arrested on suspicion of theft and cautioned."

An eBay spokesman said: "People who try to break the law on our site won't get away with it. We work closely with police forces."



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Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Doctor's license pulled for selling hospital supplies on eBay

State board revoked license of Dr. Roy Chi Wing Lung of Mission Viejo, who practiced in Fountain Valley.
BY COURTNEY PERKES
The Orange County Register

A Fountain Valley doctor can no longer practice medicine after sneaking into hospitals where he did not work to sleep, shower and steal medical supplies to sell on eBay, according to state medical records.

The California Medical Board revoked the license of Dr. Roy Chi Wing Lung, who practiced emergency medicine, effective this week. A woman who answered the phone Tuesday at Lung's Mission Viejo home hung up. Lung's lawyer, Michael Khouri, said Lung can reapply for his license in three years.

"He's a good physician but he made some errors in judgment," Khouri said. "Unfortunately, when you're in that position, you can't make those kind of errors."

The legal documents allege the following:

In 2004, Lung, 42, pleaded no contest to burglary and theft in connection with taking two computers from Long Beach Memorial Medical Center. He was accused of showing up in blue scrubs and a white doctor's coat to blend in, although he was not a member of the staff. He was ordered to pay $5,000 in restitution.

In 2007 and 2008, the medical board documents say that Lung was spotted at Orange Coast Memorial Medical Center in Fountain Valley, where he did not have medical privileges. He worked at a hospital in Huntington Park. On one occasion at Orange Coast, he was caught in the doctor's lounge with a tray of food, working on a hospital computer. He refused to identify himself and the hospital called police.

Wing allegedly told officers that he had used the hospital about once a week for 10 years when he was tired on his way home. When police searched his car, they found three boxes of sutures packaged for shipment. Police tracked the address and discovered that Wing was selling sutures on eBay for $50 a box. He denied stealing them from the hospital, though a nurse had reported seeing him with full pockets, the documents say.

In January 2008, the medical board temporarily suspended Lung's license to practice. In March, he was caught writing prescriptions and treating patients at a physical therapy practice in Pomona. According to board documents, Lung claimed he thought he was only barred from working in hospitals.

In deciding to revoke his license permanently, an administrative law judge cited Lung's repeated dishonesty and the "serious misconduct" of treating patients after his license was suspended.

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PayPal is the latest tool for some scam artists

By Cindy Bevington
Sunday, 29 March 2009 09:47

First it was eBay: Scammers hoping to access consumer eBay accounts and, ultimately, their checking and/or credit card accounts, used fake 'Item Dispute" notices to trick victims into clicking on links in e-mails to clear up the so-called problems, or to correct mistakes.

The scam worked so well that it still thrives today in various forms, even though just about every online complaint forum in existence not only has warnings about the scam, but also posts countless stories from victims who have lost hundreds and thousands of dollars to these thieves.

Next came the "security validation" notices by phone and e-mail, instructing victims to call a special number or access a specified Web site that asked for account numbers and passwords, again in an attempt to steal credit information and drain bank accounts from consumers who believe the scam.

Again, no matter how many warnings flood Internet blogs and consumer protection Web sites, or how many consumers report losing a combined total of millions of dollars in this scam, it's still been successful enough to still be running in full force.

And now, like a disease that morphs into a new strain just as it's about to be eradicated by a miraculous drug, a new twist on an old scam has come around, this time using PayPal as its burglary tool to gain access to your money.

My "invitation" to be taken in this new crime spree came by e-mail from payment' This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it with the subject line "Your payment to Live Strip Chat Camera Sexy Girls is now complete."
What?

I scrolled down. "This email confirms that you have paid to Live Strip Chat Camera Sexy Girls ( This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ) $122.50 USD using PayPal," the letter said. Payment details followed, showing a transaction number and an item/product number.

Then, I suppose just in case, I decided to quickly check my PayPal account to see how something like this could have happened, the letter added, "It may take a few moments for this transaction to appear in the Recent Activity list on your Account Overview. ... If you want to cancel this payment please click the link below."

Live strip chats? Were it not for the fact that I write a consumer column, I think the shock and indignation at something like this arriving in my e-mail inbox would have tricked me into clicking on that link, maybe even before I came to my senses enough to go directly to my PayPal account, rather than using the link.

The problem with this e-mail is twofold: One, it's a scam that's new enough to throw even a wary person off-guard; and two, it's the kind of scam that makes your blood boil if you're not the kind of person to order live chats with camera-ready girls, sexy or not.

So what happens is that, if nothing else except out of disgust, the recipients of this scam go lickety-split to the link, rather than traveling the slow road to the real PayPal Web site and checking through the real claims processes. And that's just what the creators of this fraud are hoping millions of victims will do.

Unfortunately if you do fall victim to this scam, by the time you calm down, the damage is already done. So how do you protect yourself from scammers who are growing ever-so-much-more clever in their burglary methods?

The most important thing is DON'T TRUST ANY E-MAIL THAT COMES UNSOLICITED, asking you to confirm, accept, deny, decline, validate, cancel, affirm or terminate a transaction, process, charge, credit or purchase. Next, watch for the red flags. My red flag was that this notice came to my work e-mail account -- an account the real PayPal would have no way of knowing is mine.

Another red flag is the use of "USD" in the amount due column of the fake e-mail. Other red flags in other types of scams can be misspellings, bad grammar and sentence structure, and the lack of a name in the "To" part of the address bar of e-mail -- usually that means if the "To" part says "undisclosed recipients," it's a scam.

TIP OF THE WEEK: Scammers are getting smarter. Just because the letter looks real doesn't mean it is real. These days, the only way to know for sure is to go to an original Web site or phone number that you are familiar with, not a link in an e-mail.

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By Michael Morton
GateHouse News Service
Posted Mar 31, 2009 @ 01:09 PM
HOLLISTON, Mass. 

Five years into restoring a 1966 Mustang purchased on eBay for his wife, David Bushee received a visit from police Friday telling him to hold his horses: The car had recently been reported stolen in Pennsylvania.

"There's something suspicious about this whole thing," the Wilson Street resident said Monday, surmising that someone simply wants restoration work done for free. "We're disputing the stolen car report."

Lt. Keith Edison of the Holliston Police said Bushee bought the blue Ford GT convertible Mustang in good faith, paying roughly $8,000. He said police in Lancaster, Pa., called the department and said the car had been stolen in their city, with the owner noticing it was no longer in storage.

Edison said the suspected thief somehow got a duplicate copy of the title and posted the car for sale. Police in Lancaster could not be reached.

Given that the Mustang's body had rotted through, Bushee said he had to pick up the car in Pennsylvania with a flatbed truck. He has since spent $60,000 to restore it, with the labor of love for his wife not yet complete.

"She's always wanted a Mustang, ever since she was a kid," he said, adding that he has hired a lawyer and contacted Lancaster Police.

Edison said he was waiting to hear back from his Pennsylvania counterparts, though he noted the Mustang sits in pieces.

"I'm not sure how they're going to handle it," he said. "It's not like we can pick it up and have it towed back to the station."



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With all the crime reports about ebay and Paypal each and every day it is impossible to keep up with it all, but this is something which needs to be shared.
This thing probably happens more than anyone could imagine.

Police log: Box of rocks in eBay return

by TP staff

Aug 24, 2009


A man on the 400 block of East Sixth Street called Tracy police at 11:11 a.m. Sunday and said he got swindled on an eBay return. He sold a hydrogen generator for $475. The buyer returned the item for a refund but sent back a box full of rocks instead of the generator.

The man said he had to get a police report before eBay would start investigating the return. Tracy police forwarded him to the San Joaquin County Sheriffs Office.

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