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Beware of the “lost dog scam”

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We’ve heard of some amazing scams before, but Times staff Writer David Colker introduces us to a new one today.

The pitch: ‘I found your lost dog!’

The scam: A phone call from someone who reports finding a beloved pooch is usually cause for celebration. But Western Union warns that it could be a cruel scam. The company has received reports from owners of lost dogs who say they’ve been called by people identifying themselves as truckers. The dog, a supposed trucker says, was found along a highway.

How it works: The driver says there was no time to get the dog home because of a tight delivery schedule. Now the truck is across the country, but the trucker offers to put the dog on a flight. All you have to do is wire money for the fare. Or sometimes the trucker will also say the dog was injured, and request additional money to cover vet bills.

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The outcome: You show up at the airport to meet the flight, but your dog doesn’t arrive. The con artist had gotten your number off a ‘lost dog’ poster or advertisement and never had the pet at all. The nearly surefire way to tell this was a scam was that the money had to be wired -- that makes it easy for the fraudster to pick it up and hard for you to trace it.

Advice: Western Union suggests that anyone who is phoned long distance by a person claiming to have found a lost pet ask questions about the animal that are outside the scope of what was on a poster or in an ad. In any case, always be wary if a stranger requests funds be sent by wire.

Info: Full text of the company’s warning is at www.westernunion.

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