wooden-ipad-plank

Selling speakers out of a back of a truck must have become a tired scam as criminals are stepping up their game with Apple tablets and laptops in a South Carolina town.

Earlier this week, 22-year-old Angela McDowell of Spartanburg, South Carolina was leaving a McDonalds when approached by two men in the parking lot. Inside a large cardboard box, the men claimed to be selling discount iPads for $300 based off a volume discount. After showing her a working model, the duo convinced McDowell to purchase an iPad. While McDowell was only able to offer $180 for a new iPad, the deal was quickly made and McDowell received a sealed, cardboard FedEx box. When she returned home, she opened the box and found a piece of wood painted to look like an iPad (pictured above). The plank had the Apple logo painted on the back of the unit and Safari, Mail, Photos, and iPod app buttons on the front of the unit. The crooks even included a fake Best Buy label on the front of the wooden iPad.

paper-laptopOn Wednesday night, two more women were approached at a Spinx gas station in Spartanburg, South Carolina by a man claiming to be selling discount Apple laptops. After convincing the women of their authenticity, the ladies withdrew money from an ATM to purchase a new laptop. Also packaged in a FedEx box, the women learned that they purchased a stack of paper wrapped in black duct tape with a white power cord. The fake laptop also included another Best Buy sticker. Both scams are believed to be perpetrated by the same man as the descriptions included similar facial features and an identical automobile (a white four-door sedan).

This type of scam is typically called the brick con, parting a mark from a large amount of money by dangling the concept that they are getting a high value object for an extremely discounted price. Oddly, the scam doesn’t require the extensive lengths that this criminal went to in recreating the design of an iPad on a block of wood. The scam usually entails swapping out an expensive item for something of a similar weight, regardless of design. 

Showing 12 comments

  1. Juan Frias at 2:24am 4th September 2011 What a bunch of low life scum of earth!!! Get a real job.
  2. Mike Dunn at 1:58pm 3rd September 2011 Painting the piece of wood seems like a pointless step in the scam process. Sadly I'm sure this sort of scam is happening all the time and just never reported.t
  3. maxnsc at 12:56pm 3rd September 2011 What kind of dumbass falls for this? A greedy one that thinks they are getting something for nothing...
  4. maxnsc at 12:56pm 3rd September 2011 What kind of dumbass falls for this?? A greedy one that thinks they are getting something for nothing.
  5. Ernst Anton Christian Krautwald at 6:50pm 3rd September 2011 How can people be seriously this dumb....
  6. willjammer at 10:16am 3rd September 2011 if it had been stolen merchandise and she purchased it, it's also a crime. the law states that if a deal is too good to be true, then you understand that it's stolen. i have no sympathy for folks that buy stuff off the "back of a truck." you get what you pay for, and in this case, it was fraud they were paying for and they got it. let this be a lesson for all that buy fenced goods. sometimes you may not get the fence - but rather the shaft.
  7. Philip Scott at 4:48pm 3rd September 2011 HA
  8. Braxton Edwards at 4:34pm 3rd September 2011 Women...
  9. James Phillips at 4:29pm 3rd September 2011 Oh my actual god
  10. TechFreak at 9:29am 3rd September 2011 She is an idiot for not opening the box and looking....she doesn't deserve to get screwed, but she hopefully learned her lesson!
    1. Harry Smith at 2:08pm 3rd September 2011 It is more out of desperation and excitement...she did learn it at cost
  11. Danny Kennedy at 4:23pm 3rd September 2011 If I were to have bought something from a man in a van, I'd at least have the intelligence to open the package before they left. Also, that is without a doubt the worst paint job ever.
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