From: Jonathon
Griggs [mailto:jalijah@singnet.com.sg]
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 1:25
Subject: New vacancy
Metro
Finans is opening a vacancy for the
Correspondence Manager position.
Company
Overview
Metro
Finans is a National professional
staffing and services firm
exclusively dedicated to the
construction industry. We work with
employee and employer in the process
of building a project team and take
a hands-on approach at each step.
Mail handling managers are providing
an excellent service to our clients
in various countries as valuable
employees of our Company.
Job
Description and Requirements
Correspondence manager is
responsible for receiving and
transferring packages from
manufacturers and local shops to our
customers. The detailed instructions
are provided.
Our
Mail handling managers are required
to:
-
Receive the correspondence from our
company to his/her residential
address • Report to our manager
about new parcels (Every candidate
will be included in manager’s lists)
-
Repack received items following the
instructions our manager will send
you.*
-
Receive prepaid shipping label.
First month we offer $24 per each
shipped out box. (In a week there
can be more than 10 parcels, in a
month - more than 50 parcels)
- Fill
the forms and papers as it will be
shown in our manager’s instructions
(You will receive e-mail with
instructions for each box).
- Ship
the package out using the specified
shipping method (at this moment we
use mainly EMS /every USPS office
can ship it with EMS Global
Express/) Base Payment Mail handling
managers receive $1000 salary per
month and additionally $25 for every
shipped package during the trial
period. The salary is paid via WU or
PayPal monthly.
After
the trial period it’s equal to $2000
per month and $50 per package.
Please, contact us ONLY at:
rachaelaser4221@gmail.com to get
more detailed information and ask
Your questions about the position of
Mail Handling Manager.
However,
this is a scam! Instead of
“correspondence manager”, the real title
should be “mule”. Unfortunately, these
“employers” offer bogus contracts and
other documentation to make them appear
legitimate.
If you get a solicitation like this, ask
yourself:
-
Why
does this company need a middle man
to receive packages from
manufacturers and send them to
customers?
-
Why
doesn’t the company just have the
manufacturer send the package
straight to the customer?
The bottom
line is that the purchases from the
manufacturers are made with stolen
credit cards or are the result of ID
theft. The merchandise is then shipped
overseas to another mule who then
forwards the merchandise to the thieves.
The stolen merchandise is then sold.
Once the
package has been reshipped, you are now
“guilty” of receiving and shipping
stolen property. This often leads to a
visit from police, as the return address
or shipping receipts lead back to you.
However,
once the police realize that you just an
employee of this fake company and are
just reshipping product, the police
investigation will likely end because
the forwarding addresses go overseas,
beyond the purview of the police.
A variation
is the Western Union/Moneygram scheme
where the mule is hired to go to Western
Union/Moneygram to pick up the payment
(which is addressed to the mule) who
then wires the money to the thieves.
It’s reminiscent of the Canadian lottery
scam and other sweepstakes cons. Again,
the only identifiable person is the
mule.
Protect
yourself; don’t fall for this scam.
-
Avoid
job listings that use these
descriptions: "package forwarding,"
"reshipping," "money transfers,"
"wiring funds" and "foreign agent
agreements." These and similar
phrases should raise a red flag.
-
If you have
questions about the legitimacy of a
job listing, contact the
Better Business Bureau
or the
Federal Trade Commission.
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