Buying a car on Facebook

Buying a car on Facebook

Author
Discussion

R6tty

Original Poster:

388 posts

22 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
I thought just recently, Facebook had cleaned their act up with all the scam adverts for non-existant cars. Checking 'other items for sale' were coming up looking genuine, with no long lists of 'bargains'. Surely, if you were running a scam, you'd put a fairly realistic but low price, not a ludicrously low one. 75% of value rather than 25%.
Anyway, in an attempt to see just how it works, I am persuing a 2012 Bentley Continental at the bargain price of £4800. I've received an invoice and I really don't see the catch. Just need to send the money.

MrBen.911

544 posts

125 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
R6tty said:
Just need to send the money.
Good luck!! biggrin

vikingaero

11,188 posts

176 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
If the user has 900 other cars for sale at a quarter of the genuine price then you know it's a scam. As as the profiles. Often a woman is used. Now I'm not being sexist, but why would a granny have more cars for sale from home than a main dealer?

Every day a journey

1,935 posts

45 months

Tuesday 16th April
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CAAS Transport Ltd?

R6tty

Original Poster:

388 posts

22 months

Tuesday 16th April
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Yes! CAAS.

georgeyboy12345

3,640 posts

42 months

Tuesday 16th April
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lol

R6tty

Original Poster:

388 posts

22 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
I've reported obvious scams to FB in the past. Nothing happens. But I thought they have been better lately.
I have asked CAAS if I can pay on delivery (with a 'sorry my English isn't very good').
I find it sad that it really works and the vulnerable get caught out.
Anyway, never owned a Bentley before!!

LuS1fer

41,710 posts

252 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
There are still hundreds of scammers with massive long lists of cars for peanuts.

I responded to one indicating the vendors were a bunch of replicas of female genitals but just got a standard response saying the car was still for sale and to contact a sales manager at an e-mail address. Obviously the next leg of the obvious scam.

However, I then got a shed load of emails trying to give me stuff for free or sell me crap and I had to block them every time. They stop after a while.

brillomaster

1,395 posts

177 months

Tuesday 16th April
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Sounds perfectly legit to me. Enjoy your new Bentley!

R6tty

Original Poster:

388 posts

22 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
So they won't do COD. Can't view the car prior to delivery. They will 'MOT the car in my name' and tax it. Apart from that, it all looks very legit and well presented. Sad that people fall for it.
Bored now.

vikingaero

11,188 posts

176 months

Wednesday 17th April
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These cars always have "new tires" and "clean titles".

It's the same with desirable products - a Yeti Coolbox that retails for £300, used might be £250, but scammers list them for £32 and direct people from a website to order them. You pay £32 and they never deliver. In the meantime the website has served its purpose and scammed 10,000 stupid people out of £32.

chrisch77

694 posts

82 months

Wednesday 17th April
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Mark McCann just posted an interesting video about these scams on YouTube for anyone interested. I don’t think there has been any effort done by Facebook to address the problem as any car search now seems to come up with more dodgy ads then genuine looking ones.

The objective is always to extract some form of holding deposit from buyers, so please stick to the age old advice of don’t pay anything until you are standing in front of the actual car!

Richard-390a0

2,572 posts

98 months

Wednesday 17th April
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vikingaero said:
These cars always have "new tires" and "clean titles".
free of any liens or encumbrances is the phrase I've also noticed.