Fooled by a Scam

March 9, 2011

in eating out,Los Angeles,My story

I am the world’s biggest gullible fool. I’m kind of the reason why there are still internet scammers in the world making an instant grand while munching on Lucky Charms cereal in front of the computer all day.

You see, last week, I almost got scammed $1,200. Not that I have $1,200. But here’s what happened…and here’s who to blame.

This is Daina:

_DSC3493She lives in Little Tokyo:
_DSC3474And one afternoon, she and I met up for lunch at this sweet little spot at the Japanese Village Plaza:
_DSC3481Which stand across Pinkberry (Hi, Froyo Fairy!):
_DSC3477…and right next to a cute little Japanese rock garden, no less:
_DSC3480 And yeah. I fell in love.

I fell in love with the idea of living by Little Tokyo at downtown L.A., with a view overlooking the Los Angeles Times building, walking my pet every morning by the quaint town of hip artists and avid foodies, having coffee every weekend with Daina.

Remember when I said I got an internship for the summer with the L.A. Times? I called my recruiter and asked if there’s anybody I could contact who can help me get prepared for the internship.

My recruiter connected me with Daina, who interned last summer at the same spot I will fill up this year. Then he added: “Daina was the best intern I’ve ever hired yet. She certainly set the gold standard for all future interns.”

”Future interns” meaning me. Oh dear. Way to set the intimidation.

But more than being intimidated, I was curious. Who was this girl of whom the recruiter spoke so highly? I needed to meet her. So I invited her to lunch.

Since Daina lives in Little Tokyo, I let her pick a spot in her neighborhood, and we finally settled on Joy Mart.

I know. The name. It pains me, too. But more on that later.

After my meeting with Daina and cruising the darling, eclectic streets of Little Tokyo, I began cyber-cruising for apartments around the downtown area. Turns out the lofts at Little Tokyo doesn’t go any lower than $1500 a month. My idyllic downtown apartment dream deflated with a pfffffft.

But then. I saw it on Craigslist:

$600 for studio downtown. Fully furnished. Newly renovated.”

Um, hello? This is exactly for me!! I contacted the lister immediately.

The next day, the person answered as Elizabeth Ellis. “She” said she was now in the UK because of her job, and desperately needed to rent out her new place at a savvy apartment downtown. She said she couldn’t give me a tour of the place because she was in the UK. But she gave me the address of her place, and pictures of it. She also said she wants a reliable, responsible tenant.

I took a peek of the apartment building, and it was gorgeous. All swanky and shiny, with a Starbucks and a hip pub on the first floor. $600 for a studio here? It sounded too good to be true.

Well, it was too good to be true.

After I responded to “Elizabeth Ellis” telling her that I was definitely interested, and promising that I’m a good tenant, she started sounding more sketchy.

“Hi, thanks for replying,” she e-mailed back. “Now here’s what you have to do…”

And basically, she wanted me to send her $1,200 (rent + deposit) to a new account she will open on eBay, and then she’ll send me the key and contract and if I am “not satisfied” she would refund me the money.

Hmm. That made me take a second to think about the things that did not make sense:

1) First of all, she never ever addressed me by name. She was very cold and impersonal in her messages.

2) She had such atrocious grammar, it hurt my eyes to read her writing. That made me not like her from the start.

3) The most obvious: she asked for money first. On eBay…Huh?

4) $600 for a glamorous studio in downtown L.A.? Yeah. Too good to be true.

But the thing is…I desperately wanted to believe this person. I went round and round trying to talk myself into believing that she was for real. Thankfully, I forwarded my e-mail exchanges to my wiser buddy Christina, who immediately messaged me back and told me it is most definitely a scam, you IDIOT!

Well, she didn’t say the “idiot” part, but that is what I was, bluntly put. My desire for that place was so strong that it greatly inhibited my ability to think rationally.

Kind of a problem because that has happened to me too many times. But it’s also me wanting to believe in the good of humanity. Which might work against me as a future journalist. Hmm.

Ahem. Wow, I can break into so many deep and soulful tangents with this topic.

But anyway. God, was I PISSED OFF. I wanted to write back to “Elizabeth Ellis” and tell “her” that “she” is f**king busted and I’m going to report her sorry ass and make her eat ape shit.

I didn’t e-mail her back, but I did report the incident to the IC3 who probably will use my complaint as toilet paper. But I just needed to let go of some steam.

So yeah. I blame Little Tokyo for its charm, for luring me with fantasies of being part of its kawaii community.
_DSC3476I’m still dreaming, but for now, I’ll just stay a distant admirer.
_DSC3475Back to Daina, who I definitely admire. She’s definitely really personable and smart; I could see why the L.A. Times recruiter was so impressed with her.

Because her college is a small liberal arts college and doesn’t have a journalism major, she was curious about my journalism curriculum, and I curious about everything L.A. Times.
_DSC3479We met up at Joy Mart, a little Japanese restaurant in the middle of Little Tokyo.
_DSC3482I  have no idea why it’s called Joy Mart, but it is a nice, casual place, sort of a gem in its own right.
_DSC3483
But Daina and I got to talking non-stop as soon as we sat down, and it was half an hour before we got to ordering. I think we might have pissed the servers off a bit, because they had to ask us 4 times if we were ready to order.

We finally did. I got the lunch special, which came with a simple salad in some kind of vinaigrette (didn’t like it):
_DSC3484And miso soup (yum).
_DSC3486I got a combination of two dishes. One was the salmon sashimi:
_DSC3488The other was the Unagi Bowl:
_DSC3487Grilled fresh water eel, nori flakes, and egg in sweet eel sauce.
_DSC3490 The Unagi Bowl was delicious, though nothing special. Just very basic eel you can buy from the store, drenched in sticky-sweet soy sauce mixture. I ordered it, however, because I hadn’t had unagi in years and suddenly craved it after Daina told me it was her favorite.
_DSC3494The egg was pathetic though. How is a few eggy hair-strands called “egg”? I could barely taste it.

As for the sashimi, I can’t be a good judge, because I have not had enough sashimi to tell the difference between a good and a average one.
_DSC3491All I know is that the cold, sensual, silky slab just melted in my mouth. Utter bliss. Sashimi rocks.

Love it dipped in wasabi and soy sauce. By the way, check out this cute soy sauce jar:
_DSC3485Can I take it home?

Daina ordered the Jer-Jer Ramen:
_DSC3489 Ramen noodle with pan-fried ground beef, mushrooms and brown onion in spicy oyster sauce.
_DSC3492The girl clearly knows how to order her food!!! She out-foodied me here.

It definitely endeared her to me. I get slightly perturbed when someone only orders vegetable sushi or the California Roll.

And then we talked for more than an hour. We had to shout a bit because it was so loud at Joy Mart, which seemed to be a popular lunch hang-out spot.

Daina confirmed that the internship was a kick-ass job. As in, it kicks your ass. It’s a lot of work and you’re basically tossed into assignments after assignments without anyone to guide you through the ropes…but it’s also fun and rewarding and everyone is super awesome.

Oh my God. I’m so nervous. Oh my God. I can hardly wait.

After lunch, we trudged off to the Little Tokyo mall, which was just a block away, where Daina treated me to dessert:
_DSC3495Paulette is a macaron heaven.
_DSC3497If you must know, macarons are my favorite dessert. They also remind me of a certain blogger. ;-)
_DSC3500There is just something so…posh about macarons. They’re not meant to be gobbled down with fat-free milk like oreos. They are meant to be appreciated and savored…preferably with a small cup of espresso.
_DSC3499Paulette plays to that exquisite charm of macarons with its clean, elegant design.
If I lived in Little Tokyo, I would visit this place daily and do my readings or writing here…ah, if only. Enough dreaming, Sophia._DSC3496Since I treated her to lunch, Daina asked if she could treat me to a macaron. As if she needed to ask! ;D
_DSC3498I decided to get the earl grey tea macaron, which again reminds me of a certain blogger (you know who you are!).
_DSC3501I saved it to nibble on during the rocky, nauseous bus ride back home, but here’s a shot of it in its dear little package:
_DSC3502It was wonderful. Lovely crispy shell that shatters, and that intensely rich, chewy center. Sweet and perfumed with earl grey tea floral notes, but not sickeningly sweet.

Oh shoot. I just realized another idiotic thing I did. I just told the world that I’m an easy target for scams.

I hope no scammer is reading this. *Squints eyes into suspicious glare*. But if he/she is, I hope I’m now the wiser after this incident.

Don’t you even dare, whoever you are. I’m not that girl anymore.

Question of the Day: Ever get scammed before? Or if you’re too smart to be scammed, what is the most ridiculous scam you’ve come across?

Related posts:

  1. La Beauté
  2. To Be Ambi-Social
  3. Replenished
  4. Histor-yum
  5. A Little Tokyo Day Trip

{ 67 comments… read them below or add one }

Becki @ Hike, Bike, Eat March 9, 2011 at 10:41 pm

I actually wrote to one of those a few years ago in LA. As soon as they wrote what they “nedded yoo to dow (needed you to do)” was to deposit money, I reported them to the spam-police. Glad you didn’t go any further!

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elise March 9, 2011 at 10:43 pm

at least you were rational and savvy enough to email a friend. the same thing happened to a coworker in NYC last year and she was out the cash. such a bummer that horrible people like this prey on people who want to believe in the best.

just breathe a huge sigh of relief that you didnt fork over the dough!

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mitzi @ my nikon eats food March 9, 2011 at 10:46 pm

ugh…craigslist is so full of scams! i’d venture to say half of craigslist is made up of scams…maybe a stretch to say, but that’s what it feels like!

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J3nn (Jenn's Menu and Lifestyle Blog) March 9, 2011 at 10:48 pm

I’m so sorry that your dream apartment was a scam! I feel so bad for people that fall for it. Thankfully, I’ve never been a victim, but I am th vice prez of our software company and we deal with security a lot, so I’m familiar with all the schemes. At least you found out in tine and know better for next time! They prey on the desires of those in need. Sucks.

Your photos are so brilliiant! As are you, sweet Sophia!

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Meg March 9, 2011 at 10:48 pm

Well thank goodness you listened to your intuition and didn’t fall for the scam! Though I admit, if I were in your shoes I would have been pretty convinced too. When I was selling my husband’s dirt bike (don’t worry– it was with his knowledge) I got an email saying that they would send a check for more than the cost of the bike and then I would send the overage to western union for “shipping”. Since I’d already heard of this type of scam at work, I saw the red flag right away. Like you, I was PISSED with a capital P. I wrote a big huge nasty gram, deleted it and the original email. So, yea, I know how you feel.

Can you believe I don’t think I’ve ever had a macaroon… can you believe it?

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meg March 9, 2011 at 10:49 pm

Be careful! So glad your smart enough to detect such scam. Sometimes people aren’t trustworthy even if we want to trust almost everybody. But I guess you’re wiser now!;)

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Kim @ Coffee Pot Chronicles March 9, 2011 at 11:04 pm

I can usually spot these weasels a mile away but every so often one comes across that looks legit and serious…until you send a casual e-mail. Grrrr!

Sorry to read about your mishap but thankfully you were able to check on it with the wonderful help from Christina. Your hunches knew something didn’t seem right and well, you were right. Smart girl!

By the way, your journalistic “can’t trust everyone and must look at everyone with a cautious eye” mindset will develop over time. I dig for information if something or someone doesn’t seem right…and often my instinct is correct. Often but not always 100%.

Regardless of the slight mishap, glad you had a wonderful lunch and the delicious macaron to nibble on. =)

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Christine March 9, 2011 at 11:14 pm

We’ve been looking for a bigger place these past couple months and boy, so many scammers on craigslist! One wanted me to send money too, without even showing me the place. There was another one who I think scam people just for laughs. Didn’t ask for money, but pretty much prank-emailing us. What is wrong with the society?! Good thing that you didn’t fall for it.

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Abhilash March 9, 2011 at 11:21 pm

:) It is good to read that you did not fell for the scam. Try a authentic home next time…

So you had a good lunch… I hope Diana would be pleased to share the purse. :)

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Eden March 9, 2011 at 11:34 pm

Oh my, a post about me (macarons, that is ;) ).
Anyhow……yes, I know the feeling of wanting to find a place SOOOO bad that you’ll believe anything. My roommate and I went through similar things when looking for our apartment. I think we even had one named “Elizabeth Ellis” too! But you are NOT an idiot. Believe me, many people actually send in the money, to Ebay!
Anyhow I love macrons, they are “me” after all! There is a paulette near my house! But i never see anyone inside, I hope they dont go out of business or anything.

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Orchid64 March 10, 2011 at 12:18 am

I’ve never been scammed before, depending on how you define “scam”. I was promised better internet speed by the cable company, had it installed, and then it was horribly slow. I counted that less as a scam as an out and out sales lie.

By the way, Little Tokyo looks nicer than the real Tokyo (and the interior of the Joy Mart looks very un-Japanese). That being said, “Joy Mart” is a seriously Japanese-sounding business name. They love all sorts of happy-sounding English names for businesses.

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Jessie March 10, 2011 at 3:44 am

I can’t believe I missed the announcement that you’re interning at the LA Times. Go, Sophia! I’m so proud of you! :) I’m glad the scammer didn’t pull the wool over your eyes (at least not completely :P ), and I know, it’s hard not to believe something that’s too good to be true. When I was looking for a used car, I found the exact car I wanted for a couple thou less than KBB on Craigslist being sold by “Sergeant” Whatsis. I’m assuming the “Seargent makes it sound more official. When I sent another email, “Sergent” started saying things like “the car appears to be in good condition” and “the car is housed in such and such garage” … anyway, it smelled fishy. I guess we both know what a scam looks like now!

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Lesley Lifting Life March 10, 2011 at 4:51 am

First off … congrats on your internship!! That’s so very exciting! Second, I’m really glad you didn’t fall for that scam! It’s crazy how many there are out there :s

Third, Sophia, I must admit … I am that person who just orders California rolls, it’s true. However, I blame it on the fact that I just don’t know what else to get. If I had someone of your expertise guiding me, I promise I would be much more adventurous! ;)

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Sophia March 10, 2011 at 8:11 pm

Haha, then I’d totally love to take you out to a Japanese restaurant and order for you…I hope you stop by L.A. sometime! :D

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Andrea@WellnessNotes March 10, 2011 at 6:05 am

Little Tokyo looks and sounds amazing. So sorry the apartment was a scam. :(

I had totally forgotten about your L.A. Times internship!!! That’s so exciting!!! And you’ll be around all summer! :) Glad you got to meet up with Daina to get some “inside info”…

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Natalie @ Will Jog For Food March 10, 2011 at 6:30 am

wow…the whole craigslist ebay thing she had going sucks! We got tricked via craigslist once too. A REALLY nice house for a super low price. Of course that nice house is never available anymore, just a scam for the agent to suck you in to their other things.

So funny…I had a macaron for the first time last night! It was SOOO good! crispy on the outside, mushy on the inside. I loved it.

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Tori March 10, 2011 at 6:37 am

I’m so scared of having my identity stolen or something by someone online!! I get weird emails all the time that I keep having to block. They’re always saying that they’re from overseas and that I’ll inherite millions of dollars by helping them out with wiring money through a bank account here. Or something like that. Everytime I get them I feel like they can see me or something!! Lol! I’m paranoid!

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Sophia March 10, 2011 at 8:13 pm

LOL I get emails like that all the time. 3-5 every week! Annoying pests!!!

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Melissa @ TryingToHeal March 10, 2011 at 6:55 am

Oh man, I’m glad you caught that scam before you handed over any money!

and i LOVE little tokyo? have you ever been there during obon? It’s so great and fun at that time of the year!

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Clare @ Fitting It All In March 10, 2011 at 7:58 am

Oooh a similar thing happened to me a few years ago. I found a too-good-to-be-true nannying job on Craigslist. $600 a week! One kid! Just go to the pool! But then they wanted me to open a wells-fargo account and to send money orders.
duh duh duhhhh suddenly when I started asking questions, I stopped getting responses.
Craigs list jobs no more.

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Shannon March 10, 2011 at 8:10 am

unfortunately i got “scammed” by some guy on the street and realized when i got home how stupid it was. Now I pretty much avoid sketchy characters and anyone asking for anything. :(

but, i’ll take that macaron, please!

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light delight with Tou Tou March 10, 2011 at 8:32 am

hahaha that’s funny
but what a great day you are having! I can’t believe you had so many great food within one day. When I visit San Francisco, I love their Japan town too :-)

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Monique March 10, 2011 at 8:38 am

So glad you got out of the scam unscathed!
The lunch looks WONDERFUL! i havent had sushi in forever!

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LeQuan March 10, 2011 at 8:46 am

Thank God you did pay that lady/man/thing, whatever that evil was! And I’m glad you reported it, even if it might be used for toilet paper (sorry, had to laugh at the way you said it), at least you got to unload some fumes. This must’ve been the tweet about having to run or you’re going to kill somebody. I don’t trust buying anything from the Internet. Although I totally understand. I’ve been there done the wanting a place so badly thing too. I’m just really glad you caught the evil early.
OMG! Those macarons looks sooooo good! ME WANTS! Macarons rock! Nuf said.

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Sophia March 10, 2011 at 8:17 pm

Nope, the tweet was way before this happened. The tweet was just me being an evil bitch because I felt like being one. ;-)

I like how you call it. “The evil.” Hee hee.

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Sara @ Nourish and Flourish March 10, 2011 at 9:10 am

Oh those macarons look delightful. They are my new favorite treat…mainly because I feel so dainty and sophisticated eating them. Haha :-)

So sorry about the scam, but I’m glad you realized it BEFORE handing over money. I spent about a month searching for apartments in DC, and actually came across a number of similar ads on Craigslist. Anything that sounds too good to be true almost always is!

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Kate March 10, 2011 at 9:44 am

No offense to you, but I seriously don’t get how people fall for these scams. Although, to be fair, you didn’t because something obviously didn’t sit right with you. So give yourself some more credit.

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Heather March 10, 2011 at 9:44 am

Can you believe I’ve never had a macaron? They’re on my “to-make” list, but even then I’ll have nothing to compare them to!!

Sorry about the scam – at least you realized it before it was too late!

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Kelly March 10, 2011 at 9:52 am

Clearly you are not gulliable because you figured out it was all a scam. There seem to be so many of those out there, but I agree with you, if something seems too good to be true, that probably means it is. Maybe because of that I was always a bit too scared of finding an apartment on Craig’s List. I personally went through an apartment hunting service (one that charges the landlord not the tenant). It didn’t give me quite the same selection but in the end I felt a bit more protected. (Although my landlord STILL sucks.)

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Stefanie @TheNewHealthy March 10, 2011 at 9:59 am

Ah, damn scammers! That apartment did sound amazing–it’s just too bad it was too good to be true!

By the way, your internship sounds fabulous! I can’t wait to hear about it! :)

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esther March 10, 2011 at 10:22 am

I saw so many of those listings when I was searching for an apartment in NYC. I know two friends (from the midwest) who fell for those scams! One of them lost $1500, one of them lost $500 before realizing that the guy was asking for way too much money over a wire service.

I’m glad that your friend was able to use discernment and help you keep your money!

Hope you flagged the listing on craiglist!

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Biz March 10, 2011 at 10:27 am

Sophia, if it makes you feel any better, I am 42 and still trust and believe almost anything I read or hear – thankfully my husband always sets me straight!

Hope you find something in that neighborhood though, it looks wonderful!

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Pretty Pauline March 10, 2011 at 10:35 am

OH I’d love to live there, too! I’m so glad you wised up just in time. That’s a lot of $$$!

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annie March 10, 2011 at 10:43 am

my ex-coworker used to say if these people had used their skills for good instead of evil, this world would be so much better!

that ramen looks bomb and my favorite desserts are french macaroons too!!

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Joanne March 10, 2011 at 10:47 am

I’m always a bit on edge about scams but I’ve never actually been scammed before. that’s so scary! Usually I’m just worried the guy I met on the internet will turn out to be a 60 year old. I guess that’s a scam of sorts.

The food and macarons in Little Tokyo would have sold me instantly as well! I know you’re going to do great at the LA Times!

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Ameena March 10, 2011 at 1:26 pm

Oh I hate shady things like that but I’m glad that you realized the scam before it was too late. I mean seriously? This Elizabeth person can’t even run a scam well…I feel kind of sorry for her. :)

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Melinda March 10, 2011 at 1:35 pm

If the grammar is crappy I assume scam or someone who has so little regard for language that I usually just ignore, but I can see how easy it would be to get scammed. I ignore emails left and right that sound suspicious. Good for you for not falling for it. Sadly there are people out there who will fall for that. I am just glad you did not.

All that food looks good and I bet Little Tokyo is so cute that I would want to live there too. I love macarons. I want those now!

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Belinda @zomppa March 10, 2011 at 1:57 pm

Oh my gosh! I’m so glad your inner detective caught on – glad you reported this person!! I can see why you want to live there – that food!! Hopefully something will come that’s the real deal!

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Mary @ Bites and Bliss March 10, 2011 at 3:08 pm

Honestly, people will do anything for money!! Glad you didn’t fall for it. :)

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teresa March 10, 2011 at 3:24 pm

boooo to scammers! ugh, it’s vile how people will take advantage of others. i have yet to try a macaron, they look delectable!

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Kristina @ spabettie March 10, 2011 at 3:49 pm

Mmm, Joy Mart looks delicious…

I’m glad you didn’t lose your money. GAAH that kind of thing just burns me up, because my mind doesn’t think that way!! I am wary of the little details that don’t sound right, but I know so many are taken by crooks like that. BOO!

I have a funny one… my first job out of college – I was an accountant, and was eager and excited by the business world I was in… I answered the main office phone once, and was asked to talk to the person who handles money and biz decisions… well, that was me!! :) they started in on this big explanation of “our copier toner” and they have a big sale right now because of a surplus… asking me for authorization to send… which I gave… when it showed up it was a huge case of toner that didn’t even fit our copier!! I was DUPED !! ;)

over the years and jobs, I have answered these kind of calls SO MANY times… people saying they are “my merchant credit bank” or “my” this or that… I know IMMEDIATELY they are not – so I LOVE to ask them… oh, which bank IS this, then?? it makes ME feel good, but I’m sure this gets people all the time!!

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Sophia March 10, 2011 at 8:25 pm

Ha! Good for you to stump them back! Do they usually just hang up? Or make up crap when you ask them for details?

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Jolene (www.everydayfoodie.ca) March 10, 2011 at 4:06 pm

Nope, luckily I have never been scammed – I assume everything is a scam :-) But I haven’t heard of a real-estate scam like that!!! That is pretty crazy – I would have wanted to believe it too! Scam artists should really learn to spell better and be more personal … LOL!

Those ramen noodles look good! I have never seen those at a restaurant. I have also NEVER had a macaroon!

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eva626 March 10, 2011 at 4:07 pm

great post!!! love your pictures!!

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Karyn March 10, 2011 at 4:52 pm

i’ve never been scammed before but mostly because i delete / don’t look at things like that. because i know i will be. i rely on my friends to do the detective work for me with things like apartments. and i never really go on the internet to do things. because i am an old fogie hahah!

i’m glad you didn’t lost any money!

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Lee March 10, 2011 at 5:33 pm

Glad you didn’t fall for the scam. So weird that she tried to make you pay on ebay. That makes no sense at all!

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Stephanie March 10, 2011 at 6:25 pm

I love little Tokyo! Who knows, maybe you will find a place there that isn’t part of a scam. It sucks that there are people out there that don’t give a shit about other people. It’s a good lesson to learn and re-learn that some people just aren’t good people (though most are!)…I suspect that the internship you’ll be doing may drive that point home.

Those macarons are gorgeous :)

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Hayley March 10, 2011 at 6:36 pm

I used to be easily scammed because I was young, naive, and trusting and wanted to assume the best in people. Then I got older and jaded and realized that people are all jerks :)
Seriously though, I would probably feel drawn to 600 a month for a nice apartment. Who wouldn’t? Those scammers are such teases.

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Veronica March 10, 2011 at 10:06 pm

LOL! Don’t feel bad, girl, my hubby was scammed and it actually worked! A company called him to try and sell a vacation package to him which he didn’t want, but agreed to pay $10 for annual updates on packages they’re offering. A $600 debit showed up on our checking account, and after much inquiry, we found out that company had went ahead and used his debit card information to charge the vacation package! We tried to fight it, but since he had agreed to the $10 charge on tape, they used that to say that they had approval for the charge. Thankfully they did take off $400 of the charge but we still had $200 down the drain and never even used the stupid package (which was a thing where you agree to listen to a time shares pitch while on vacation, which I hate b/c it’s hard for me to say no). I was sooo mad! Things like that have made me very slow to trust. When I was trying to sell a ring on Craigslist, all kinds of scammers were contacting me with impersonal messages with horrible grammar, as you described, acting like they were interested but wanted to send an excessive amount of money and I would have to send the extra to a third party. Craziness.

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Sarah March 10, 2011 at 11:24 pm

Eek! So glad you found out about the scam in time. And your food looks so yummy, I adore Japanese food. Just wanted to tell you that you were in my DREAM last night! We met up in a restaurant that looked more like a bedroom, in that we had to sit on beds to eat. Your food was ok, but mine kept sloshing around and spilling everywhere, as well as parts of it disappearing for no reason. In the end we were the last ones there, mainly because I was searching for the missing parts of my meal! Haha.

You were excellent company in the dream btw ;)

Sarah x

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burpexcuzme March 11, 2011 at 12:01 pm

WAHAHAHAH!!! I love it!!! Ah, that’s amazing. I’m also pleased that my meal was okay in the dream…but hope you dream again and find the missing parts of your meal. ;)

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Blond Duck March 11, 2011 at 4:34 am

We’ve all been scammed before!

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Heavenly Housewife March 11, 2011 at 4:35 am

I can’t say i’ve been scammed, but I have deffinitely been lied to many a time, and now I am a lot less gullible than I used to be. It makes me sad that I was so trusting and people would take advantage. Daaahling, you know why? Its cause you and I are good :) . Anyways I am glad you found out in time.
I have heard about Paulette. What a lovely looking place, their macarons look perfect :)
Do stop by my place and enter my giveaway for an $80 Amazon gift card!
*kisses* HH

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Lorraine @ Not Quite Nigella March 11, 2011 at 4:51 am

Ooh you’re so lucky you didn’t get scammed! For an awful second I thought that you were going to say that your friend in the first photo scammed you! But she looked too nice to do that :)

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kate March 11, 2011 at 5:17 am

arg! why do people post such things? i am glad your figured it out before you gave her money.

dude, macaroons are so pretty. i could decorate my house with photos of brightly colored macaroons.

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