on โ31-05-2018 04:07 PM
Anybody encountered this?
We're a long time seller on eBay and also have our own website.
We received a credit card chargeback on a fraudulent transaction on our website $300.00
We had proof of delivery and contact details so we called the customer who said they received the item, but they purchased it on eBay for $160.00
Hmm!
So is this what happened?
Buyer purchases item from dodgy eBay seller who doesn't have any products. Dodgy eBay seller then purchases an item from another website using stolen credit card details and gets them delivered to eBay buyer.
eBay buyer happy, no complaints got the item, thinks they're from eBay, dodgy eBay seller gets his money from PayPal.
Three months later credit card holder sees the fraudulent charge on their card and claims a chargeback against the 3rd party website that delivered the goods.
Unless you looked into it you'd have no idea eBay was involved, because both eBay buyer and seller are very happy
3rd party merchant just thinks it's another dodgy sale, has no idea they're supplying goods for sale on eBay!!
I've often wondered when I see an item on eBay selling at or below cost, what's going on, maybe this is it.
Comments?
Solved! Go to Solution.
on โ31-05-2018 09:03 PM
The way I read it, the buyer bought from a different seller, who used the OP as a dropship supplier. The seller paid the OP with a stolen card, the owner of which then instituted a chargeback.
The seller is out his goods and money($300), the scammer has the money from the buyer ($160), the buyer has the goods.
on โ31-05-2018 07:27 PM
That's a very clever scam and would require some efforts. A ghost middleman.
A very likely scenario in your case by the sounds of it.
But doesn't mean all items selling below cost fall under such a scam.
I often pick up brand new items for half the price as they are an unwanted gift, wrong one was purchased or buyer didn't need it afterall.
There are some every elaborate scams especially via technology, phones or internet.
And from where I sit, they are on the rise.
I assume you are running your website as a business and I would be asking your bank how you can protect yourself against any such future chargebacks. Insurance available, bank only authorising chargebacks after consulting with your business etc.
on โ31-05-2018 08:50 PM
Did you send the purchased item to the customer's address? From what you say (that you contacted the customer, and that you had proof of delivery), it would seem so.
If it is so, then I'm at a loss as to how this scam could have worked with an intermediary.
Are you absolutely certain that the customer hasn't falsely claimed unauthorised use of his/her card?
There are a couple of issues that concern me in this story.
Frankly, I can't make head or tail of what's gone on, other than to say that from the details you've supplied so far, it's at least possible that the customer is the one who's either made a mistake or has perpetrated a fraud. If you have proof of delivery and contact details, you can go to your bank and contest the chargeback.
on โ31-05-2018 09:03 PM
The way I read it, the buyer bought from a different seller, who used the OP as a dropship supplier. The seller paid the OP with a stolen card, the owner of which then instituted a chargeback.
The seller is out his goods and money($300), the scammer has the money from the buyer ($160), the buyer has the goods.
on โ31-05-2018 10:01 PM
The scam is very elegant.
From the scammer's point of view it has some huge advantages
- he receives "clean" money from a legit buyer,
- with any sort of luck, there will be considerable time to dissipate that money (and obscure the money trail) before the credit card owner checks, reconciles and reports his loss - and before buyer and seller work out what's happened, and
- if he can keep up his supply of stolen card details, the scheme can be repeated ad infinitum, for any products, and any amounts below the credit card warning trigger thresholds.
on โ01-06-2018 06:50 AM
on โ01-06-2018 07:01 AM
on โ01-06-2018 07:10 AM