Something here makes body parts twitch. There are several similar ones in the same area, a goose-neck that's so big it won't fit in the picture for $2k? Anything like this goes for 3X the price.
Lemme know if you bring it home.
Something here makes body parts twitch. There are several similar ones in the same area, a goose-neck that's so big it won't fit in the picture for $2k? Anything like this goes for 3X the price.
Lemme know if you bring it home.
For what it's worth, most wildly underpriced craigslist scams seem to be listed at $2,000 for some reason. The single, distorted photo throws up a red flag for me as well. I hope it's legitimate and someone gets a great deal, but I'm skeptical on this one.
914Driver said:So you meet the guy and he robs you? How's this work?
Sorry, uninformed not stooped.
As someone looking for a trailer, I've been wondering the same thing. I even contact a few of the enterprising scammers when they had odd prices that looked like it could be semi-legit, but after waiting a full 24+ hours then getting a "sorry, I'm busy at work, email me @ <whatever@gmail.com> address," I've given up trying to figure out how the scam works.
They say, I'm out of the country but you can have it shipped to you and we'll use craigslist or ebay escrow (neither of which exist) and you'll get your money back if you don't like the trailer. Needless to say the trailer doesn't exist and neither does the escrow service and you've just handed $2000 to a complete stranger for nothing at all.
914Driver said:Dayum, you guys are better than a nympho girlfriend that cooks!
If only she would clean too.
Anyone else notice that there seems to be more and more of these lately? Must of worked for some scammer somewhere so now we get the pile on.
Typically only one interior or exterior picture, poor quality or copied from someone else's listing or stock photo. Price point in the $2k range no matter what size trailer.
dculberson said:They say, I'm out of the country but you can have it shipped to you and we'll use craigslist or ebay escrow (neither of which exist) and you'll get your money back if you don't like the trailer. Needless to say the trailer doesn't exist and neither does the escrow service and you've just handed $2000 to a complete stranger for nothing at all.
I figured it had to be something like that, as I've dealt with car scammers before, but I could never get the conversation far enough along to have them attempt to scam me..
Maybe trailer scams are the fry tank of the scamming hierarchy?
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