Originally published Saturday, July 31, 2010 at 7:03 PM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
'Stranded traveler' scam can swindle family, friends
Debbie Laramie wasn't robbed in England. She was hacked while she was at home in Michigan — a victim of the "stranded traveler" online scam that sends out pleas for money.
Detroit Free Press
American "tourist" Debbie Laramie wasn't robbed in England.
She was hacked online — a victim of the stranded-traveler scam that is sweeping cyberspace — while in her home state of Michigan.
Bad guys hacked into Laramie's Facebook and Yahoo accounts this summer. They stole her online identity, address book, changed her passwords, then sent out a message using her e-mail address:
"I'm writing this with tears in my eyes. We came down here to England for a short vacation and we got mugged at gunpoint last night, at the park of the hotel where we lodged. All cash, credit cards and cell were stolen from us ... The hotel manager won't let us leave until we settle the hotel bills, we are freaked out at the moment ... "
The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center issued a warning last month to Americans about the stranded-traveler scam. But it was too late for Laramie.
The e-mail sent in her name went on: "... lend me the sum of $1750.00 so we can settle the hotel bills and get a return ticket back home. Please do me this great help and I promise to refund the money as soon as I get back home. I look forward to your positive response, so I can send you the details you need to send the money to me through Western Union."
Read the e-mail closely, and you notice the weird English phrase — "do me this great help" — but some friends only noticed that the plea came from Laramie's own e-mail address.
Laramie estimates the message went to at least 270 people, including her mayor, doctor, kids' teachers and entire high school class reunion list. She found out she'd been hacked when her doctor called to ask if she was OK.
She then realized she was locked out of her Yahoo and Facebook accounts and that somebody else was pretending to be her.
For the next week, her phone kept ringing from long-lost friends, colleagues and family asking if she really needed financial help. Even a cash-strapped friend called saying, "I don't know how, but I will get you your money."
It took wrangling to get Yahoo and Facebook to restore her access. Then she found that her entire contact list had been erased, Facebook page changed and e-mails evaporated.
"I felt like somebody broke into my house," she says. On the other hand, the outpouring of from friends ready to help if she actually was stranded in England made her grateful. "The people who know me know I've never been to Europe. I am only up at my cottage ... "
To avoid being a victim of this scam, protect your passwords on e-mail and social media accounts. If you get an e-mail like this, call your friend or message back asking a question only your real friend would know. Scam victims should file an FBI complaint at www.ic3.gov.
NEW - 8:12 AM
Rick Steves' Europe: Helsinki and Tallinn: Baltic Sisters
NEW - 8:00 AM
More extensive TSA searches in Sea-Tac Airport rattle some travelers
Winter play in the French Alps — without skiing
Carnival group hit by fire cheered in Rio parade
United cuts 2011 growth and Southwest raises fares
![]()

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwautos
The Dodge Challenger SRT 392, left, and Dodge Charger SRT8 for 2012. (Chrysler) America is flexing its muscle. Sales of modern-day muscle cars are sur...
Post a comment
- Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
- A look at possible Mariners lineup | Mariners Blog
- Dustin Ackley on Taijuan Walker after facing him in BP: "He's close to ready" | The Hot Stone League
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- McGinn addresses murder 'emergency' in annual speech
- Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction | Mariners Blog
- Italy: Divers find 8 more bodies in ship wreckage
- Injured Seattle firefighter's award of $12.75 million upheld by court
- Landscape beneath former Lake Aldwell revealed | Field Notes
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Judge: State can't make druggists sell Plan B contraceptive
557 - Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
328 - The overdue split among Democrats on education reform
232 - Speculators blamed for rising oil, gas prices
173 - Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction
133 - AP source: Obama seeks 28 percent corp. tax rate
128 - Seattle's hopes of luring NBA's Kings here takes a hit
127 - Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
85 - Seattle full-day kindergarten fees to increase 15%
79 - Brendan Ryan and Munenori Kawasaki having fun and working hard at Mariners camp
57
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Spaghetti squash can be a side or main dish
- Deaths highlight boom in backcountry skiing
- Japan quake studies suggest harder jolt to NW possible
- Seattle surprises in James Beard nominations | All You Can Eat
- Head of Madigan removed from command amid PTSD probe
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- Zumba's Latin rhythms on the move in the fitness world
- 'Oklahoma' seen in a new light | Nicole Brodeur
- Four dead in avalanches at Stevens and Snoqualmie passes







