Credit Card Charge - may be on your bill

julie_m

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Mysterious credit card charge may have hit millions of users


Several Internet complaint boards are filled with comments from credit card customers from coast to coast who have noticed a mysterious charge for about 25 cents on their statements.

The charge shows up on statements as coming from "Adele Services" in Melville, N.Y. There is no business by that name listed in Melville, or registered to any business anywhere in New York, for that matter.

Two theories of what is going on have advanced on message boards and among consumer advocates: Someone is trying to find out whether an illegally obtained credit card number will work before making a bigger charge, or they're trying to rip off tiny amounts from tons of people.

The latter theory has more credibility at the moment.
The Better Business Bureau in Louisville reports that, at least so far, those who have been hit with the small charge have yet to get slammed with a bigger charge. The bureau speculates that the number of possible victims could be in the millions.

It's not clear how the numbers got in the hands of the people making the charge, but consumer advocates say it is most likely through either a data theft or someone using a computer to generate numbers.

Former Massachusetts assistant attorney general Edgar Dworsky, who runs ConsumerWorld.org, said the scam reminded him of an old adage: "It's easier to steal $1 from a million people than $1 million from one person," he said.

Most people, Dworsky said, are likely to overlook or ignore the small charge. "Isn't that the perfect scam, when the victim doesn't even know something has been taken?" he said.

Take a look at your credit card statements, and if the charge is there, don't let it slide. It's what the thieves want you to do. Instead, file a dispute with your credit card company, and lodge complaints with the Federal Trade Commission (www.ftc.gov) and the Internet Crime Complaint Center (www.ic3.gov) - which is run by the FBI, the National White Collar Crime Center, and the Bureau of Justice Assistance. Federal law enforcement officials tend to react when the complaints reach a certain volume.
 
Thanks Julie, I will look. Isn`t it always something??
 
I just realized that I always just pay my bill without looking. I'll start...but I'll probably forget and stop again!
 
I am looking for this story on a major website/news network, but when I search I only see it on sites I have never heard of. It's on a bunch of them though. Whether it's true or not, however, I hope it's making people pay attention to their credit card statements, because it can and has happened before (in addition to charges continuing to show up on your card after you cancel with a company). In short, check your statements, all the time.
 
Whoever did that is a really smart person. .25 cents from 3,000,000 people (just throwing out a number) is $750,000, big money still.
 
Like the old stories about the bank teller who kept one cent from every transaction. Over time, it adds up--and who's going to hassle about a teeny amount?
 
I am looking for this story on a major website/news network, but when I search I only see it on sites I have never heard of. It's on a bunch of them though. Whether it's true or not, however, I hope it's making people pay attention to their credit card statements, because it can and has happened before (in addition to charges continuing to show up on your card after you cancel with a company). In short, check your statements, all the time.

This was on Yahoo! News - I'm sure they can make mistakes but are probably fairly accountable.

I checked my statement - clear so far, haha.
 
Whoever did that is a really smart person. .25 cents from 3,000,000 people (just throwing out a number) is $750,000, big money still.

wow! the homeless guy i give spare change to may be a millionaire
 
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