Anonymous wrote:It would have bugged me too. Of you cant shake the uneasiness, you could go to that Walmart and get video footage based on something? Does Amount denied get recorded in their system?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the physical card was actually swiped at a Walmart in this area and your housekeeper just faked your signature (as we all do on those machines), I highly doubt the transaction would have been flagged as fraudulent. It would have gone through without question.
Right, but what is the alternative scenario? It wasn't on online retailer so I just don't understand what happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most likely the number was stolen from a vendor that had the number.
To go shopping at Walmart in Alexandria? Doesn't make sense. Gosh, I really wish it was someone from the outside. But I am terrified its my housekeeper. I don't know what to do. I do hope it's a random, internet hack though. But how do I know for sure???
It's the Analyst again. It's impossible for you to find out. Fraud is committed in complicated ways. It could've been done through a merchant breach, a random credit card number guess etc. Just relax.
Why are you advising relaxing in light of a breach?
Because one doesn't alert Scotland Yard for something like this which happens all the time. You let the CC company know they were fraudulent charges, they remove them from your account, you cancel the card and get a new one so the old number no longer works. Probably every adult in this country has had a card number compromised at some point. It happens, you don't launch a worldwide investigation into it.
Anonymous wrote:Happened twice to me in the last 7 months.
Chase very good about alerts. They told me it is most likely a repeat, local merchant.
I had small online charges to charity and overseas both times--a trick they use before trying larger purchases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most likely the number was stolen from a vendor that had the number.
To go shopping at Walmart in Alexandria? Doesn't make sense. Gosh, I really wish it was someone from the outside. But I am terrified its my housekeeper. I don't know what to do. I do hope it's a random, internet hack though. But how do I know for sure???
It's the Analyst again. It's impossible for you to find out. Fraud is committed in complicated ways. It could've been done through a merchant breach, a random credit card number guess etc. Just relax.
OP here again, its just this nagging feeling I can't shake. I know she shops at Walmart. And Alexandria is close to where she lives. I realize I can't confront her but I honestly do wonder...
There are probably 1,000,000 peopel who shop at Walmart in this area and another few hundred thousand who live in Alexandria. If the card wasn't missing, it wasn't your housekeeper.
Anonymous wrote:Don't the more sophisticated frausters have printers that can literally print out a card if they have the number? OP does the card referenced have a chip?