Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School mom is on her way to Gucci to buy a tote bag with OP daughter’s money.
OP’s daughter should definitely file a police report and let school mom and her admin know a police report is incoming.
More likely she's betting big on the ponies or getting high at OP's kid's expense.
My mother and my step-father both -- separately -- fell for phone scams. My stepfather truly believed he was paying the taxes on the big screen TV he won using Visa gift cards. My mother ended up wire transferring $50,000 to some woman in China to "reimburse" Amazon.![]()
Those of you who think this only happens to stupid people do not know how incredibly convincing these scammers can be. I hope you never find out.
Anonymous wrote:School mom is on her way to Gucci to buy a tote bag with OP daughter’s money.
OP’s daughter should definitely file a police report and let school mom and her admin know a police report is incoming.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all for replying.
To those who wondered where I was, I was at work.
And yes, it's a legit internship. The person who hired her is another school mom. My son's friend is also an intern at the company. That kid is still in high school.
This happened yesterday morning amid the flurry of setting her up on her first day. The hiring manager was asking about setting up payment, instructing her on invoicing the company as an independent contractor (because it's a short summer job), all the usual private info one relinquishes to a company when setting up for work. Amidst this first hour, she gets an email from the company "president" asking for her phone number to discuss a special project. That is where the texting scam began. He told her these gift cards would be distributed to the company employees and it was supposed to be a surprise.
On the one hand, I wish I had been around. But on the other, I can't hand hold her for the rest of her life.
People have lost entire retirement investments to such scams so I feel this has a positive life lesson outcome in these early years of building her net worth.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all for replying.
To those who wondered where I was, I was at work.
And yes, it's a legit internship. The person who hired her is another school mom. My son's friend is also an intern at the company. That kid is still in high school.
This happened yesterday morning amid the flurry of setting her up on her first day. The hiring manager was asking about setting up payment, instructing her on invoicing the company as an independent contractor (because it's a short summer job), all the usual private info one relinquishes to a company when setting up for work. Amidst this first hour, she gets an email from the company "president" asking for her phone number to discuss a special project. That is where the texting scam began. He told her these gift cards would be distributed to the company employees and it was supposed to be a surprise.
On the one hand, I wish I had been around. But on the other, I can't hand hold her for the rest of her life.
People have lost entire retirement investments to such scams so I feel this has a positive life lesson outcome in these early years of building her net worth.
Anonymous wrote:That the scam occurred within the first HOUR of her onboarding makes me suspect this was an inside job