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Stainfield Jobs Reports & Reviews (4)

Emailed me saying they found my resume on indeed.ca. Asked me to answer 2 questions ( If you are interested in applying for this position, please respond to this letter by answering the following questions:

1.Why do you think you are the best candidate for this position and what specifically do you think you can contribute to our company?

2. Name three things you need to establish a comfortable working environment?) Offered me a position based on those questions. No interview or additional info required. Job seemed too good to be true. Asked for personal I formation over email. The tone, grammar, and spelling deteriorated drastically with each email succeeding the original email which led me to believe it was a scammer contacting me.

The recruiter (Jennifer Hill, a senior manager) sent me an email telling that I am qualified to apply for their HR Specialist -online recruiter position and asked me if I am interested. I accepted the offer and they sent me an employment agreement already signed by the employer (Timothy M. Merritt) I signed the agreement and gave the details of my personal info including my full name, birthday, address, phone, email, bank name. All communications were done thru email. The first training I did was posting in free website at Indeed a job vacancy. The next training will be to post job vacancies in paid job sites. The process for this would be: they will electronically transfer funds to my account, then from that funds, I will buy bitcoins to pay the job sites where I will post job vacancies. This 2nd training was not done, they stopped communicating with me for 2 days. Maybe they were verifying my personal background and funds After getting all my details, they stopped contacting me.The website of the recruiter if you open is really a recruitment agency but we can see on their website that their clients-employers are all US based and the job vacancies are in the USA.

I applied for a job through indeed.ca, even thought there was a glaring mistake in the job ad. It was posted as from BCAA (British Columbia Automotive Association) however the body of the job advertisement was written as from a recruiter looking for to fill their clients opening for a not-for-profit youth organization.

I just thought it was a typo and applied anyway. The next day I got an email from Annette Bagwell saying that they were a job recruitment agency, that they were eager to hire me and to reply to the email if I still wanted the job. When I replied saying yes that did want the job I instantly got back an email to look over the attached job description. This is where I knew something was not right. The job description was not what I applied for however if was a work from home position with incredible pay. After reading it I was instructed to reply again to the email as to how I was a good fit for the job etc. At this point I decided to research this company. The website looks legit but when you try to look a little further on the site, especially the job search portion you get "error" messages. By searching the BBB I found another person who had a similar experience however she actually applied for the job and thought they were just trying to get her personal information.

I was contacted by someone going by the name of Rebbeca Huff, on behalf of a job recruiting "agency" called Stainfield Jobs. This person told me that I'd applied and they wanted to offer me the job, but I had never heard of this company. Mind you, I'd been job hunting for months and was losing track of where I'd applied, so I gave them the benefit of the doubt. I couldn't find any information on the company; they seemed nonexistent (apart from their website that did in fact have job listings).

This person was very persistent, and despite me asking questions about what the job would entail, they gave me very little information about what my job duties would actually include. First my title would be Human Resource Specialist, then on the "Freelance Agreement" they sent me it said Job Recruiter. They didn't speak English very well which was odd, you'd think someone in their position at an actual agency would have decent grammar. And the salary they were offering was overly generous for very minimal, stay at home work. It didn't make sense.

What fooled me was that contract. I read it over a handful of times, and it seemed legitimate. Looking back, they could've copy and pasted it from anywhere and had me sign it. But I was desperate after job hunting for so long, and was intrigued by the possibility of actually making decent money with minimal experience. My judgement went out the window.

What has my stomach in knots now, is they also wanted photo ID. So I took a picture of my driver's license (I blurred out my license number and address) and sent it to them. They now have my full name, photo ID, date of birth and postal code. All basic private information to get into private accounts, and god knows what else.

I *** *** * *** ***, and regretted it as soon as I pressed send. I didn't do my homework until after the fact, and realized that every email interaction between myself and this so called "Rebbeca Huff" (whom I couldn't find on Facebook or social media) was a red flag, and a clear indicator of a job scam. Now my personal information is most likely in the hands of criminals.

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