[email protected] Reports & Reviews (1)
[email protected] Contacts
If you know any contact information for [email protected], help other victims by adding it!
Add new contacts
|
If you know any contact information for [email protected], help other victims by adding it!
Scammer's website IDK, Found Through Google
Scammer's address Beaver Creek, OH 45324, USA
Scammer's email [email protected]
Country United States
Victim Location OH 45324, USA
Total money lost $1,602
Type of a scam Retail Business
At approximately, 1:15 pm, after exhausting efforts to unlock the vehicle. My neighbor had to return to work, and since my cell phones were locked in the car, I was unable to dial a locksmith to unlock the vehicle. My neighbor quickly searched the web for a locksmith and dialed (937) 240 – 5451 after stumbling upon the number when searching for a Locksmith through Google.
He asked the operator how much the service would be, to unlock a car, and the operator said that she could not tell him the price, but would have the locksmith reach out to him.
My neighbor, who was back at work at that time, received a phone call from the “locksmith” who said he’d be at my car in 35 mins, and that he could not tell him what the price would be to unlock the car until he got there.
I waited for the locksmith’s vehicle to pull up and then met him at his unmarked vehicle when he arrived at approximately 2:00 pm. The supposed Locksmith was driving an unmarked white mini-van with no company insignia and was dressed in a brown carhartt jacket while wearing a bright green sweatshirt and jeans, with no Locksmith company insignia whatsoever.
Upon meeting the Locksmith, he rolled down his window and asked me which vehicle it was, and I pointed to my car that was parked in a parking spot right outside my apartment. I asked him how much the service would cost, and he shrugged off my question, stating that he wont know until he “completes the job”.
He unlocked my car in just a couple minutes, went back to his vehicle and wrote up a paper bill for $400 dollars. At that point, my neighbor had returned from work, and came over to witness the situation. The “locksmith” and his company kept the price of the service hidden from us, until the job was done, and then hit me with a $400 dollar bill for unlocking my car. I asked him how he could justify a $400 dollar bill and he immediately became violent and threatened me with police consequences if I didn’t pay him the $400 dollar bill. He used intimidation tactics to complete this transaction, and I was under the impression that he had a weapon.
Like from an episode of American Greed, he coerced me to sign his phony bill and ran up a total of $1,602 dollars on my credit card, and attempted to steal even more from another one of my cards. I never received a receipt and I don’t even know who he was, just that he came from a company called “Dayton Locksmith”