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Water Powered Car - Part 2

sheghan’s Blog

July 17, 2008

Indy Mac Meltdown…what It Means To Construction To Perm Loans

Filed under: Indy Mac, banking — sheghan @ 9:09 pm

On day 2 of the Indy Mac meltdown, customers in California had lined up at midnight outside local branches waiting for the bank to open to withdraw their money. Police were needed to control the crowds.

Federal Deposit Insurance protects any account up to $100,000, or $250,000 if it’s a retirement account.

Anything over $100,000 should simply be put in different banks, with no more than $100,000 in any one bank. And federal regulators say banks being taken over are still a rare occurrence.

I am amazed at some people who put more than $100,000 in one account and will lose those monies because the FDIC only insures $100,000.

IndyMac has been bleeding deposits ever since Sen. Charles Schumer of New York questioned its viability June 27. Over the next 11 days, depositors withdrew $1.3 billion, forcing its closure on Friday by the Office of Thrift Supervision. While some blamed Schumer for starting a run on the bank, Schumer blamed IndyMac for making ridiculous loans and regulators for looking the other

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Now New Yorkers are starting to worry.

Shares in regional banks and thrifts also plunged on Monday, partly in reaction to IndyMac and partly on fears that bank earnings, which come out over the next few weeks, could be worse than previously expected.

The biggest loser was Washington Mutual, down 34.7 percent. Wachovia, National City, Regions Financial and Sovereign Bancorp - all among the nation’s largest 25 banks and thrifts by assets - fell 14 to 16.5 percent each.

The FDIC tried to calm down the situation by stating the following.
Work with borrowers

“We will evaluate them on a case-by-case basis,” says FDIC spokesman Andrew Gray. “Our goal is to work with borrowers who want to stay in their homes. We will aggressively pursue loan modifications that are long-term and sustainable for borrowers facing difficulty.”

FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair has been pushing lenders to modify more loans for struggling borrowers who want to stay in their homes.

Other borrowers are expected to continue repaying their loans to IndyMac as usual.

However, “if they have a loan and uninsured money at the bank, they can use the uninsured money to repay all or a portion of their loan,” FDIC spokesman David Barr says.

The bank’s 33 branches in Southern California remain open under FDIC supervision.

IndyMac also had about 90 loan offices around the country, including one in San Ramon, Barr says. IndyMac shut most of those offices early last week, and the FDIC does not plan to reopen them.

Normally, when a bank or thrift fails, the FDIC finds a healthy institution to take it over. The bank closes on a Friday and reopens on Monday as a branch of the healthy institution. That didn’t happen this time. IndyMac reopened as a new bank, but under federal supervision.

“Generally, the larger banks are handled this way,” Barr says.

The FDIC still plans to seek a buyer for all or parts of IndyMac.

IndyMac also owned Financial Freedom, one of the oldest and largest reverse-mortgage lenders.

Is your money safe in the bank? Is this another S & L crisis in the making?

By: F. Lanni

July 15, 2008

Online Car Scams

Filed under: car scams — sheghan @ 1:20 am

buying-a-car.jpgBuyers beware! Purchasing a used car online can be a daunting task these days. For every legitimate website that really does provide useful services and processes, there are multiple sites promising similar services that are complete ripoffs. The problem is that many of these ripoff sites are exact copies of the legitimate sites. The idea is to confuse the consumer into feeling secure. If the sight looks legit the company must be legit, right? Wrong. Let ‘ s take a look at the scams prevalent today in the world of online used car buying, and examine how they work.

Imitation is the Sincerest Cut of Pumping up

To the lone, imitation does recurrently equal towering praise, matched if corporal is annoying to some degree. To websites legitimately selling used cars, and to sites offering services homologous for impostor protection and escrow, imitation can close over spot for consumers. In that unethical owing to actual is, real happens all the point. A uppermost problem in the online community is humans copying legitimate websites, therefrom using the nickname autograph and site structure of the legitimate website to income consumer positiveness and climactically scam them out of their insolvable - earned long green.

The scam works something related this. The criminal stimulated in footing up the artificial site will register the IP directions unbefitting a stolen personality, or conceivably aligned the identity of a deceased exclusive. The host that is providing the domain alias has no ace movement for checking the complete validity of the person and their actual personality. The Internet is smartly plenty first-rate of a hiding site for criminals to grab them all. Then the discipline place name is issued and dump we vigor. The criminal so ofttimes proceeds to plan a site that is similar to a legitimate, chipper - admitted biz site. Most of the pages, the pictures; all the bells and whistles of the actual site are the duplicate.

Beware the Fake Sloping

Consequently how make ready these criminals all told trail traffic to their fabricated website? Admirable interrogation, but the answer is fairly no sweat. For used cars and car escrow services, they accomplish sound through fake vehicle listings and follow - up emails. The crook copies the photos, VIN and description of a real used car for sale and creates a false copy of that car for sale at a below - market price. That fake listing is the lure to get you interested. The fake listing is put on major websites like AutoTrader, Ebay, Cars. com, Craigslist and others. Buyers are drawn in by the low price and typically contact the seller via email. Boom - the criminal now has your email address.

As we all know, our personal emails float around like there is no tomorrow. Just last week I received an email letting me know that I had won the British Lottery. ” Sweet! ” I thought - I don ‘ t even remember playing! Obviously it was a scam, but I use that to illustrate that my email address and your email addresses are out there. Way out there. So these scammers send out emails, and lots of them.

For used cars, the crooks typically create a fake escrow or shipping service. When you inquire about that cheap car, the crooks will send you more photos, more detail, whatever you want ( remember, they stole all of the information from a real listing ). They just want to get you interested enough to use their fake service. The con artist will send you an email with a link to the website of this fake escrow or shipping service. They want you to believe that their fake website is the real thing. If it looks real, you are more likely to send money or provide personal information.

Often, emails from the crooked seller will contain service descriptions, testimonials, screen shots of the fake website, and a link that will take you to the fake website. Many times the link takes the duped consumer straight to a form, with questions asking basic personal information and also questions to determine what services they may be interested in.

The ” Follow Up ”

A few minutes or hours later, another email is generated to the consumer. Getting this second email often falsely eases the mind of the recipient, as many less sophisticated ripoff sites just try to get you to the site once and you never hear from them again. These criminals I write about are more advanced, and they know the mind of the consumer.
buying-a-car.jpg
The second email may be somewhat personalized, using the consumer ‘ s name, and also providing instructions on what to do to secure the services of interest from the survey filled out on the website upon first visit. An example is a site offering an escrow service for online car purchases. The escrow service is one that will act as an intermediary to hold an initial payment on a car until you the consumer actually receives the car you are purchasing. Maybe it is $1000, maybe it is $5000, depending on the car price and the amount requested by the seller. These fake sites often tell the reader in the email that the first transaction made with the website must be through Moneygram or another commonly known method of moving money from your bank account to the site ‘ s escrow account for holding. Even bank wires, which used to be a safe way to transfer money, are now used by these crooks. They illegally access bank accounts through stolen identities. Since, at this point, everything about the site and the method to send money seems legitimate the consumer will not hesitate to send the deposit in good faith.

This is the last time the unwitting consumer will see his or her money, as well as the last time the site will initiate any type of communication. Usually, the consumer grows frustrated or gets concerned about the lack of correspondence. Deciding to take action, the consumer calls the service phone number on the website, if a number is even listed. Sometimes the number listed is the number for the real company, which of course will have no record of any transaction or any record of the person that made the transaction. As bad as the person at the real company may feel about the situation, there is nothing they can do to help.

Another tip regarding phone numbers: If you call a number from a website and you hear several clicks before the ringing begins, the call is being redirected to a different number. This is often the case with numbers shown on the fake websites. If you do reach the legitimate company, there will be nothing they can do for you other than to sympathize with your situation. While that is nice, it ‘ s not going to help you get your money back!


It comes down to this - if you are referred to an escrow or shipping company by a car seller, it is a good idea to call the number listed, speak with a representative, and request information to be sent to you, with the conversation referenced in the email message or mail correspondence. You can also use online resources to find services that provide a list of real escrow companies and known fake ones.

Possible Recourse

Oftentimes these scams originate in another country, making it even tougher for US law to crack down on them. The FBI, through their Internet Crime Complaint Center ( ” IC3 ” ) created a website to accept and track complaints relating to Internet fraud. Their website registered over 200, 000 complaints in 2006 alone. If you are a victim of Internet fraud, file a complaint on the IC3 website, and provide as much detail as possible about your encounter.

ICANN, the International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, is a not - for - profit organization created in 1998 to help keep the Internet secure and stable. However, even ICANN states on their own website that they do not control Internet content, cannot stop spam, and do not deal with Internet access. In short, even they will not be of much assistance to you should you find yourself the victim of a scam similar to what has been discussed here. It can cost as much as $3500 to file a formal complaint with ICANN, which is a hefty amount, especially if you have just lost money. On top of this, a court order is often needed to have a site removed from the online community, but even a court order may be of no use if the identity used to start the website is stolen or belongs to a deceased individual. If you are unable to locate the person who committed the fraud, no recourse may be available.

Securing Your Online Purchase

The bottom line is to do your homework. You simply cannot trust everything that you see online. Ask for references from friends who have used online services to purchase vehicles. Contact the business before you use them, and ask them for all of the phone numbers for the business, plus a physical address. Verify the physical address ( visit them if feasible ) and do diligent research. If a company is running a scam, odds are you aren ‘ t their first target or first victim. Look for blogs, online forums, or reviews that may alert you to the same scam that just landed in your inbox. The real companies are suffering too, as often their name is dragged through the mud because their site has been copied and illegally used to bilk people out of thousands of dollars. Find a trusted company, look for the signs of a ripoff described above, and avoid your own horror story when it comes to purchasing your next car online.

By: a.anies

July 13, 2008

Video

Filed under: Video — sheghan @ 11:53 pm

Watch the latest videos on YouTube.com

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