Work Related

Work Related
This website is for a company that doesn’t exist. The address is for a building that leases office space on demand. The phone # goes the same place. The business doesn’t exist in Kentucky. The people aren’t on LinkedIn. The pictures and text about projects come from a different construction company (that I’ve already alerted.) Set up only to look legitimate in order to buy construction equipment fraudulently with stolen credit card information.

This is a major step beyond order requests with broken English and yahoo email addresses.
http://www.krotar.com

Comments

  1. It’s pretty impressive. Normally, a fraudster will steal a name from a legit company and impersonate them using a misleading email ending in .net or .us or something instead of the company’s actual email. This almost got us because everything looked legit, they had a purchase order, etc. But they wanted to run the card in two different transactions. That was the main red flag.

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  2. Sounds like a level 5 Wealth Asset (Marketers) was trying to attack your faction. Normally a Cunning vs. Wealth roll, with 1d6 damage to the defending Wealth Asset, but luckily you were the Player Character and went on an urban adventure to skillfully uncover their deceit. Faction attack fouled by the PCs!

    Seriously, Casey G., you need to run a Stars Without Number game for me.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Oh, lame, I was hoping for a deeper and darker conspiracy then that.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Stephen Holowczyk​ in this case and most others: en-us.fluke.com - Fluke Digital Multimeters for Accurate, Reliable Measurements
    What they do with them, IDK. Sell them overseas?

    ReplyDelete

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