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A newer friend of my brother's gave him a load of baseball cards that are supposedly extremely valuable. Is this a scam?


Money transfer via western unionFriend was brainwashed by MLM-/ponzi investment scam. What can I do?Stranger in Asia wants to send me $3000 in Europe over Western Union because he “likes me”?Scammer sent money to my account. What should I do?Too-Good-To-Be-True Vehicle/RV Sale?Is this type of behavior a type of rental scam?What could a scammer do with just my signature?Funds deposited in my bank account. Account closed for suspicious activity. Is this a scam?A person ask you for money to help with a business problem in another country, you feel is trying to scam you, but you want proof, what can you do?Can a victim of a gift card scam dispute Credit Card transaction?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








7















My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately. Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details. In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable. He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.



I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases. There's probably 100-200 cards in the cardboard sleeve. My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable, and that his "super cool" friend who he'd known for three weeks just handed him this sleeve and asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.



He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.



Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.



I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.



Reasons I think this could be a scam:



  1. He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"


  2. He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards


  3. He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them


Reasons it might be legitimate:



  1. My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return


  2. He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy


  3. There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money


So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam? Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?










share|improve this question









New contributor




torogadude is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 6





    A key question - Why would your brothers friend not simply sell these cards himself? Why use an intermediary and give up 30% of the profit?

    – Freiheit
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    Off center is not an error in collectible cards. It detracts from the value. So a card in otherwise perfect condition, with an off center print, would not be considered "Mint". Its a scam. The player and card are common. You would be lucky to get $1 for it.

    – Pete B.
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    This feels similar to, but not the same as, Violin Scam, on which more at wikipedia, including the particular dog example from Hustle that I initially remembered

    – AakashM
    6 hours ago







  • 4





    'He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy" I'm a big union supporter, but there have been all too many instances of higher ups in unions totally shafting the rank and file for their own profit. Blind trust will make your brother's friend vulnerable to affinity fraud

    – Charles E. Grant
    4 hours ago






  • 6





    Your brother's "friend" is probably not trying to defraud him. He's trying to get a patsy who will defraud others on his behalf, so that your brother is the one who gets prosecuted when it all goes wrong.

    – Eric Lippert
    1 hour ago

















7















My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately. Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details. In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable. He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.



I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases. There's probably 100-200 cards in the cardboard sleeve. My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable, and that his "super cool" friend who he'd known for three weeks just handed him this sleeve and asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.



He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.



Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.



I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.



Reasons I think this could be a scam:



  1. He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"


  2. He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards


  3. He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them


Reasons it might be legitimate:



  1. My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return


  2. He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy


  3. There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money


So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam? Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?










share|improve this question









New contributor




torogadude is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 6





    A key question - Why would your brothers friend not simply sell these cards himself? Why use an intermediary and give up 30% of the profit?

    – Freiheit
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    Off center is not an error in collectible cards. It detracts from the value. So a card in otherwise perfect condition, with an off center print, would not be considered "Mint". Its a scam. The player and card are common. You would be lucky to get $1 for it.

    – Pete B.
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    This feels similar to, but not the same as, Violin Scam, on which more at wikipedia, including the particular dog example from Hustle that I initially remembered

    – AakashM
    6 hours ago







  • 4





    'He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy" I'm a big union supporter, but there have been all too many instances of higher ups in unions totally shafting the rank and file for their own profit. Blind trust will make your brother's friend vulnerable to affinity fraud

    – Charles E. Grant
    4 hours ago






  • 6





    Your brother's "friend" is probably not trying to defraud him. He's trying to get a patsy who will defraud others on his behalf, so that your brother is the one who gets prosecuted when it all goes wrong.

    – Eric Lippert
    1 hour ago













7












7








7








My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately. Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details. In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable. He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.



I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases. There's probably 100-200 cards in the cardboard sleeve. My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable, and that his "super cool" friend who he'd known for three weeks just handed him this sleeve and asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.



He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.



Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.



I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.



Reasons I think this could be a scam:



  1. He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"


  2. He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards


  3. He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them


Reasons it might be legitimate:



  1. My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return


  2. He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy


  3. There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money


So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam? Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?










share|improve this question









New contributor




torogadude is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately. Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details. In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable. He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.



I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases. There's probably 100-200 cards in the cardboard sleeve. My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable, and that his "super cool" friend who he'd known for three weeks just handed him this sleeve and asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.



He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.



Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.



I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.



Reasons I think this could be a scam:



  1. He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"


  2. He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards


  3. He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them


Reasons it might be legitimate:



  1. My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return


  2. He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy


  3. There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money


So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam? Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?







scams






share|improve this question









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torogadude is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







torogadude













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asked 7 hours ago









torogadudetorogadude

1416




1416




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New contributor





torogadude is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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torogadude is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 6





    A key question - Why would your brothers friend not simply sell these cards himself? Why use an intermediary and give up 30% of the profit?

    – Freiheit
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    Off center is not an error in collectible cards. It detracts from the value. So a card in otherwise perfect condition, with an off center print, would not be considered "Mint". Its a scam. The player and card are common. You would be lucky to get $1 for it.

    – Pete B.
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    This feels similar to, but not the same as, Violin Scam, on which more at wikipedia, including the particular dog example from Hustle that I initially remembered

    – AakashM
    6 hours ago







  • 4





    'He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy" I'm a big union supporter, but there have been all too many instances of higher ups in unions totally shafting the rank and file for their own profit. Blind trust will make your brother's friend vulnerable to affinity fraud

    – Charles E. Grant
    4 hours ago






  • 6





    Your brother's "friend" is probably not trying to defraud him. He's trying to get a patsy who will defraud others on his behalf, so that your brother is the one who gets prosecuted when it all goes wrong.

    – Eric Lippert
    1 hour ago












  • 6





    A key question - Why would your brothers friend not simply sell these cards himself? Why use an intermediary and give up 30% of the profit?

    – Freiheit
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    Off center is not an error in collectible cards. It detracts from the value. So a card in otherwise perfect condition, with an off center print, would not be considered "Mint". Its a scam. The player and card are common. You would be lucky to get $1 for it.

    – Pete B.
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    This feels similar to, but not the same as, Violin Scam, on which more at wikipedia, including the particular dog example from Hustle that I initially remembered

    – AakashM
    6 hours ago







  • 4





    'He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy" I'm a big union supporter, but there have been all too many instances of higher ups in unions totally shafting the rank and file for their own profit. Blind trust will make your brother's friend vulnerable to affinity fraud

    – Charles E. Grant
    4 hours ago






  • 6





    Your brother's "friend" is probably not trying to defraud him. He's trying to get a patsy who will defraud others on his behalf, so that your brother is the one who gets prosecuted when it all goes wrong.

    – Eric Lippert
    1 hour ago







6




6





A key question - Why would your brothers friend not simply sell these cards himself? Why use an intermediary and give up 30% of the profit?

– Freiheit
7 hours ago





A key question - Why would your brothers friend not simply sell these cards himself? Why use an intermediary and give up 30% of the profit?

– Freiheit
7 hours ago




1




1





Off center is not an error in collectible cards. It detracts from the value. So a card in otherwise perfect condition, with an off center print, would not be considered "Mint". Its a scam. The player and card are common. You would be lucky to get $1 for it.

– Pete B.
7 hours ago






Off center is not an error in collectible cards. It detracts from the value. So a card in otherwise perfect condition, with an off center print, would not be considered "Mint". Its a scam. The player and card are common. You would be lucky to get $1 for it.

– Pete B.
7 hours ago





1




1





This feels similar to, but not the same as, Violin Scam, on which more at wikipedia, including the particular dog example from Hustle that I initially remembered

– AakashM
6 hours ago






This feels similar to, but not the same as, Violin Scam, on which more at wikipedia, including the particular dog example from Hustle that I initially remembered

– AakashM
6 hours ago





4




4





'He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy" I'm a big union supporter, but there have been all too many instances of higher ups in unions totally shafting the rank and file for their own profit. Blind trust will make your brother's friend vulnerable to affinity fraud

– Charles E. Grant
4 hours ago





'He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy" I'm a big union supporter, but there have been all too many instances of higher ups in unions totally shafting the rank and file for their own profit. Blind trust will make your brother's friend vulnerable to affinity fraud

– Charles E. Grant
4 hours ago




6




6





Your brother's "friend" is probably not trying to defraud him. He's trying to get a patsy who will defraud others on his behalf, so that your brother is the one who gets prosecuted when it all goes wrong.

– Eric Lippert
1 hour ago





Your brother's "friend" is probably not trying to defraud him. He's trying to get a patsy who will defraud others on his behalf, so that your brother is the one who gets prosecuted when it all goes wrong.

– Eric Lippert
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















22














I'll take a stab at an answer here. There are a few odd things about the deal. Hanlon's Razor may apply here. This does not seem like a fair or good deal to me, but it doesn't quite elevate to the level of a typical scam.



The optimistic view of this situation is that:



  • Your brother's acquaintance is just the kind of entrepreneur who wheels and deals and does odd gigs to earn some money

  • Your brother's acquaintance is not a baseball card expert either but rather a general wheeler-dealer. That doesn't improve the deal but its faults are from ignorance and not malice

  • There is an existing, albeit brief, working relationship through a regular job and the union

  • Your brother's acquaintance just needs some basic labor done. Listing hundreds of small, low value items is tedious work. 30% for piece work with the potential bonus for a valuable card

The pessimistic view is that:



  • Your brother is being asked to list and sell something that he doesn't understand

  • There are listing fees or shipping fees that the seller wants to foist off on your brother

  • Many scams start with small requests and favors. This gets the mark in the habit of doing things for you. Over time the requests get bigger and bigger.

  • The cards are worthless or low value - the actual seller is getting a hell of a deal to sort, list, ship and sell hundreds of items. Your brother might get a bonus for a valuable card but he's likely to earn pennies per card. Pennies per listing for a guy with a solid union job is being under paid.

  • Unions may have rules about moonlighting or fraternizing. Do those rules exist in this case? Are they being violated?

  • The actual seller has some sort of banking or credit problem and cannot list the cards himself. Your brother is being used as a fence or cutout because the seller got banned from PayPal or eBay or where-ever.

  • Your brother does the listings and gets to deal with the joys of shipping, chargebacks, etc.

  • Your brother's acquaintance is abusing his seniority at work to get cheap labor outside of work

  • Your brother finds a valuable card, sells it for $250,000, gets 30% then owes taxes on a quarter million at 40%. Your brother loses 10%.

A few points from the pessimistic listing line up with a common scam in Las Vegas where a scammer offers someone a pile of valuable chips, says to cash them in and take 20%. The chips are stolen, the scammer is banned, and the cut doesn't begin to cover the taxes. Some rube ends up footing the bill and the trouble for the scammer.



A comment pointed out that this also bears some similarities to the violin scam in that a high value item that the mark is not an expert with is being dangled in front of the mark. If an offer comes along to let the mark buy that high value item at a significant discount then it is definitely a scam.



The general advice in this situation would be to treat it like any other job offer - Know your employer, ask questions about the job, ask questions about the materials being sold, understand your costs as a sub-contractor, and get your contracts in writing.



A specific answer to the question posed - It is not clear that this is a scam but it doesn't look entirely above board. Your brother should enjoy working his new job with a solid union-backed salary. Pay down debt, save, and invest that salary wisely for a bit then consider a side gig once he's settled in to his job.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

    – Nosjack
    5 hours ago






  • 2





    This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

    – torogadude
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

    – Arluin
    58 mins ago











  • @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

    – Shufflepants
    42 mins ago


















8














TLDR: This is 100% a scam.




My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately




Let me rephrase: "my brother is 'fresh meat' -- he is new to this community so he doesn't know who is trustworthy; he has more money than he knows what to do with; he's got a taste of making good money and now wants more". That's all gold to a con man; that's their dream mark.




Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details.




Con men love it when marks "do them a favour" because it makes the con man seem vulnerable rather than threatening, and builds trust. People like doing favours, and I'm sure your brother is a nice person, but this favour was no accident. The car is fine. The con man asked your brother for "help" because your brother is the new mark in town.



Think about it from the perspective of the con man. Suppose you have come up with a scam involving the mark believing that a baseball card they are holding is crazy valuable. What's the scam? Doesn't matter; the con man knows what it is. The key point is, for the scam to work you have to get the baseball cards in the mark's hands somehow.



How are you going to do that?



You need to establish a plausible reason to give the mark the "MacGuffin" -- the thing that motivates the behaviours needed for the scam -- and "in return for a favour" is just such a plausible reason.



Now, I note that the reason must not be too plausible. Why not? Surely the con is better if the reasoning is more plausible, right?



Wrong.



Con men give you deliberately implausible stories because they are looking for marks who will believe implausible stories! They're not trying to con hardened skeptics!



Your brother believed this barely-plausible story that this guy he doesn't know wants to go into business with him. Your brother is new to the community, and has ready cash, and believes barely-plausible stories. Of course the con man wants to be his new best friend!




In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable.




"Supposedly" is the key word, and good for you for using it. They are worthless.




He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.




Con men do that to again, build trust. Normal people are not in the habit of giving valuable items to people they just met.




I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases.




Those are a penny a dozen. That establishes nothing.



True story: I have all 23 issues of the Marvel Doctor Who Comics reprint series from 1984 in just such plastic protective cases. They are not worth a quarter million dollars.




My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable




They are not. Your brother is not an expert in this field.




asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.




The con man wishes your brother to commit frauds on his behalf, and is keeping 70% of the profits in exchange for 0% of the going to jail when caught.



Or, it's some other scam. Only the con man knows for sure, but it is 100% not legit, whatever it is.




He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.




It's the "his friend showed him" that is the key there. The "friend" is the one who entered the listings on Ebay. I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks.




Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.




The "he trusted him" is the key part. It is already too late; the con man has the confidence of your brother. The smart thing to do is for your brother to never speak to this person again, but that's not going to happen probably, and I'm sorry for that. Protect yourself. Do not loan your brother any money while he is still friends with this con man, because it will just go to some scheme.




I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.




Funny isn't it, how the "friend" knew exactly where to go on the internet to establish a high price, and exactly what sites to avoid that would warn people away from this scam.




He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"




All con men are "super cool". Charisma is a requirement of the job.



All con men are people you just met. You don't suddenly get conned by your close personal friends you've known for decades.




He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards




The con man knows they are valueless.




He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them




"Too good to be true" and "appealing to your greed" are common characteristics of scams.




My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return




Nope. The con man is searching for kind newcomers with ready cash to be his marks. The "helping" was a set-up.



There are frequently men whose "car ran out of gas" standing at the freeway entrance near my house, wearing cheap suits and waving briefcases at passing traffic, hoping for a "favour" from some kind, gullible person. There is no car, and it is not out of gas, and the briefcase is empty.




He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy




Do a web search on "union mafia connections" and decide whether being high up in a union is positively correlated with absolute trustworthiness. Sure, not all union leaders are mobsters, but that's not the question. The question is "are all union leaders automatically trustworthy?" and the answer is "no".




There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money




Just because you haven't figured out the scam does not mean it is not real! The con man knows the scam and is relying on your brother not figuring it out.




So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam?




Yep.




Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?




Nope.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

    – TemporalWolf
    40 mins ago


















0














Honestly it sounds like your Internet searches so far have been not very effective. "This card is not worth $250,000" is not what I would expect to find in search results; "this card [picture here] typically sells for between $4.20 and $5.70" would be what I'd expect to find.



So you may want to "up your game" in your internet searches. For instance find a bona-fide trading card site that actually talks about card values. Alternately, search eBay and then click "Completed auctions" on the left edge (I don't know where it is on a phone), and look at the green auctions which did sell (the red auctions were failed auctions due to absurd prices no one was willing to pay). Read the listings to see if those items are comparable to these.



Assuming your brother possesses a smartphone, I presume he can also spread them out in a well-lit spot, maybe 16 cards at a time, and snap a clear photo of them... Then email that photo to a card trading company which he may also find on the Net. They should be able to give him a quote.



If your brother wants to financially self-destruct, just make sure you don't have any financial connections to him (nothing co-signed, no joint property etc.) and then step back and watch him learn expensive lessons that he could learn for free from a book.






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    3 Answers
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    22














    I'll take a stab at an answer here. There are a few odd things about the deal. Hanlon's Razor may apply here. This does not seem like a fair or good deal to me, but it doesn't quite elevate to the level of a typical scam.



    The optimistic view of this situation is that:



    • Your brother's acquaintance is just the kind of entrepreneur who wheels and deals and does odd gigs to earn some money

    • Your brother's acquaintance is not a baseball card expert either but rather a general wheeler-dealer. That doesn't improve the deal but its faults are from ignorance and not malice

    • There is an existing, albeit brief, working relationship through a regular job and the union

    • Your brother's acquaintance just needs some basic labor done. Listing hundreds of small, low value items is tedious work. 30% for piece work with the potential bonus for a valuable card

    The pessimistic view is that:



    • Your brother is being asked to list and sell something that he doesn't understand

    • There are listing fees or shipping fees that the seller wants to foist off on your brother

    • Many scams start with small requests and favors. This gets the mark in the habit of doing things for you. Over time the requests get bigger and bigger.

    • The cards are worthless or low value - the actual seller is getting a hell of a deal to sort, list, ship and sell hundreds of items. Your brother might get a bonus for a valuable card but he's likely to earn pennies per card. Pennies per listing for a guy with a solid union job is being under paid.

    • Unions may have rules about moonlighting or fraternizing. Do those rules exist in this case? Are they being violated?

    • The actual seller has some sort of banking or credit problem and cannot list the cards himself. Your brother is being used as a fence or cutout because the seller got banned from PayPal or eBay or where-ever.

    • Your brother does the listings and gets to deal with the joys of shipping, chargebacks, etc.

    • Your brother's acquaintance is abusing his seniority at work to get cheap labor outside of work

    • Your brother finds a valuable card, sells it for $250,000, gets 30% then owes taxes on a quarter million at 40%. Your brother loses 10%.

    A few points from the pessimistic listing line up with a common scam in Las Vegas where a scammer offers someone a pile of valuable chips, says to cash them in and take 20%. The chips are stolen, the scammer is banned, and the cut doesn't begin to cover the taxes. Some rube ends up footing the bill and the trouble for the scammer.



    A comment pointed out that this also bears some similarities to the violin scam in that a high value item that the mark is not an expert with is being dangled in front of the mark. If an offer comes along to let the mark buy that high value item at a significant discount then it is definitely a scam.



    The general advice in this situation would be to treat it like any other job offer - Know your employer, ask questions about the job, ask questions about the materials being sold, understand your costs as a sub-contractor, and get your contracts in writing.



    A specific answer to the question posed - It is not clear that this is a scam but it doesn't look entirely above board. Your brother should enjoy working his new job with a solid union-backed salary. Pay down debt, save, and invest that salary wisely for a bit then consider a side gig once he's settled in to his job.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

      – Nosjack
      5 hours ago






    • 2





      This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

      – torogadude
      4 hours ago






    • 1





      This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

      – Arluin
      58 mins ago











    • @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

      – Shufflepants
      42 mins ago















    22














    I'll take a stab at an answer here. There are a few odd things about the deal. Hanlon's Razor may apply here. This does not seem like a fair or good deal to me, but it doesn't quite elevate to the level of a typical scam.



    The optimistic view of this situation is that:



    • Your brother's acquaintance is just the kind of entrepreneur who wheels and deals and does odd gigs to earn some money

    • Your brother's acquaintance is not a baseball card expert either but rather a general wheeler-dealer. That doesn't improve the deal but its faults are from ignorance and not malice

    • There is an existing, albeit brief, working relationship through a regular job and the union

    • Your brother's acquaintance just needs some basic labor done. Listing hundreds of small, low value items is tedious work. 30% for piece work with the potential bonus for a valuable card

    The pessimistic view is that:



    • Your brother is being asked to list and sell something that he doesn't understand

    • There are listing fees or shipping fees that the seller wants to foist off on your brother

    • Many scams start with small requests and favors. This gets the mark in the habit of doing things for you. Over time the requests get bigger and bigger.

    • The cards are worthless or low value - the actual seller is getting a hell of a deal to sort, list, ship and sell hundreds of items. Your brother might get a bonus for a valuable card but he's likely to earn pennies per card. Pennies per listing for a guy with a solid union job is being under paid.

    • Unions may have rules about moonlighting or fraternizing. Do those rules exist in this case? Are they being violated?

    • The actual seller has some sort of banking or credit problem and cannot list the cards himself. Your brother is being used as a fence or cutout because the seller got banned from PayPal or eBay or where-ever.

    • Your brother does the listings and gets to deal with the joys of shipping, chargebacks, etc.

    • Your brother's acquaintance is abusing his seniority at work to get cheap labor outside of work

    • Your brother finds a valuable card, sells it for $250,000, gets 30% then owes taxes on a quarter million at 40%. Your brother loses 10%.

    A few points from the pessimistic listing line up with a common scam in Las Vegas where a scammer offers someone a pile of valuable chips, says to cash them in and take 20%. The chips are stolen, the scammer is banned, and the cut doesn't begin to cover the taxes. Some rube ends up footing the bill and the trouble for the scammer.



    A comment pointed out that this also bears some similarities to the violin scam in that a high value item that the mark is not an expert with is being dangled in front of the mark. If an offer comes along to let the mark buy that high value item at a significant discount then it is definitely a scam.



    The general advice in this situation would be to treat it like any other job offer - Know your employer, ask questions about the job, ask questions about the materials being sold, understand your costs as a sub-contractor, and get your contracts in writing.



    A specific answer to the question posed - It is not clear that this is a scam but it doesn't look entirely above board. Your brother should enjoy working his new job with a solid union-backed salary. Pay down debt, save, and invest that salary wisely for a bit then consider a side gig once he's settled in to his job.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

      – Nosjack
      5 hours ago






    • 2





      This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

      – torogadude
      4 hours ago






    • 1





      This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

      – Arluin
      58 mins ago











    • @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

      – Shufflepants
      42 mins ago













    22












    22








    22







    I'll take a stab at an answer here. There are a few odd things about the deal. Hanlon's Razor may apply here. This does not seem like a fair or good deal to me, but it doesn't quite elevate to the level of a typical scam.



    The optimistic view of this situation is that:



    • Your brother's acquaintance is just the kind of entrepreneur who wheels and deals and does odd gigs to earn some money

    • Your brother's acquaintance is not a baseball card expert either but rather a general wheeler-dealer. That doesn't improve the deal but its faults are from ignorance and not malice

    • There is an existing, albeit brief, working relationship through a regular job and the union

    • Your brother's acquaintance just needs some basic labor done. Listing hundreds of small, low value items is tedious work. 30% for piece work with the potential bonus for a valuable card

    The pessimistic view is that:



    • Your brother is being asked to list and sell something that he doesn't understand

    • There are listing fees or shipping fees that the seller wants to foist off on your brother

    • Many scams start with small requests and favors. This gets the mark in the habit of doing things for you. Over time the requests get bigger and bigger.

    • The cards are worthless or low value - the actual seller is getting a hell of a deal to sort, list, ship and sell hundreds of items. Your brother might get a bonus for a valuable card but he's likely to earn pennies per card. Pennies per listing for a guy with a solid union job is being under paid.

    • Unions may have rules about moonlighting or fraternizing. Do those rules exist in this case? Are they being violated?

    • The actual seller has some sort of banking or credit problem and cannot list the cards himself. Your brother is being used as a fence or cutout because the seller got banned from PayPal or eBay or where-ever.

    • Your brother does the listings and gets to deal with the joys of shipping, chargebacks, etc.

    • Your brother's acquaintance is abusing his seniority at work to get cheap labor outside of work

    • Your brother finds a valuable card, sells it for $250,000, gets 30% then owes taxes on a quarter million at 40%. Your brother loses 10%.

    A few points from the pessimistic listing line up with a common scam in Las Vegas where a scammer offers someone a pile of valuable chips, says to cash them in and take 20%. The chips are stolen, the scammer is banned, and the cut doesn't begin to cover the taxes. Some rube ends up footing the bill and the trouble for the scammer.



    A comment pointed out that this also bears some similarities to the violin scam in that a high value item that the mark is not an expert with is being dangled in front of the mark. If an offer comes along to let the mark buy that high value item at a significant discount then it is definitely a scam.



    The general advice in this situation would be to treat it like any other job offer - Know your employer, ask questions about the job, ask questions about the materials being sold, understand your costs as a sub-contractor, and get your contracts in writing.



    A specific answer to the question posed - It is not clear that this is a scam but it doesn't look entirely above board. Your brother should enjoy working his new job with a solid union-backed salary. Pay down debt, save, and invest that salary wisely for a bit then consider a side gig once he's settled in to his job.






    share|improve this answer















    I'll take a stab at an answer here. There are a few odd things about the deal. Hanlon's Razor may apply here. This does not seem like a fair or good deal to me, but it doesn't quite elevate to the level of a typical scam.



    The optimistic view of this situation is that:



    • Your brother's acquaintance is just the kind of entrepreneur who wheels and deals and does odd gigs to earn some money

    • Your brother's acquaintance is not a baseball card expert either but rather a general wheeler-dealer. That doesn't improve the deal but its faults are from ignorance and not malice

    • There is an existing, albeit brief, working relationship through a regular job and the union

    • Your brother's acquaintance just needs some basic labor done. Listing hundreds of small, low value items is tedious work. 30% for piece work with the potential bonus for a valuable card

    The pessimistic view is that:



    • Your brother is being asked to list and sell something that he doesn't understand

    • There are listing fees or shipping fees that the seller wants to foist off on your brother

    • Many scams start with small requests and favors. This gets the mark in the habit of doing things for you. Over time the requests get bigger and bigger.

    • The cards are worthless or low value - the actual seller is getting a hell of a deal to sort, list, ship and sell hundreds of items. Your brother might get a bonus for a valuable card but he's likely to earn pennies per card. Pennies per listing for a guy with a solid union job is being under paid.

    • Unions may have rules about moonlighting or fraternizing. Do those rules exist in this case? Are they being violated?

    • The actual seller has some sort of banking or credit problem and cannot list the cards himself. Your brother is being used as a fence or cutout because the seller got banned from PayPal or eBay or where-ever.

    • Your brother does the listings and gets to deal with the joys of shipping, chargebacks, etc.

    • Your brother's acquaintance is abusing his seniority at work to get cheap labor outside of work

    • Your brother finds a valuable card, sells it for $250,000, gets 30% then owes taxes on a quarter million at 40%. Your brother loses 10%.

    A few points from the pessimistic listing line up with a common scam in Las Vegas where a scammer offers someone a pile of valuable chips, says to cash them in and take 20%. The chips are stolen, the scammer is banned, and the cut doesn't begin to cover the taxes. Some rube ends up footing the bill and the trouble for the scammer.



    A comment pointed out that this also bears some similarities to the violin scam in that a high value item that the mark is not an expert with is being dangled in front of the mark. If an offer comes along to let the mark buy that high value item at a significant discount then it is definitely a scam.



    The general advice in this situation would be to treat it like any other job offer - Know your employer, ask questions about the job, ask questions about the materials being sold, understand your costs as a sub-contractor, and get your contracts in writing.



    A specific answer to the question posed - It is not clear that this is a scam but it doesn't look entirely above board. Your brother should enjoy working his new job with a solid union-backed salary. Pay down debt, save, and invest that salary wisely for a bit then consider a side gig once he's settled in to his job.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 50 mins ago









    scohe001

    26429




    26429










    answered 6 hours ago









    FreiheitFreiheit

    3,99111635




    3,99111635







    • 1





      Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

      – Nosjack
      5 hours ago






    • 2





      This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

      – torogadude
      4 hours ago






    • 1





      This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

      – Arluin
      58 mins ago











    • @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

      – Shufflepants
      42 mins ago












    • 1





      Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

      – Nosjack
      5 hours ago






    • 2





      This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

      – torogadude
      4 hours ago






    • 1





      This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

      – Arluin
      58 mins ago











    • @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

      – Shufflepants
      42 mins ago







    1




    1





    Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

    – Nosjack
    5 hours ago





    Good answer. It seems to me that the brother's friend is simply ignorant of the real value of the cards, and not trying to scam anyone. However, the points you listed are definitely valid. If any of the cards do turn out to be valuable, taxes (and who pays them) will be an important consideration.

    – Nosjack
    5 hours ago




    2




    2





    This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

    – torogadude
    4 hours ago





    This is a really great answer. I appreciate the thought and possible outcomes put into this. I'll show it to him and mark this as the answer. Thank you!

    – torogadude
    4 hours ago




    1




    1





    This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

    – Arluin
    58 mins ago





    This could be a problem if the cards were stolen and the cool friend is fencing them.

    – Arluin
    58 mins ago













    @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

    – Shufflepants
    42 mins ago





    @Arluin Agreed. To me this sounds like the "friend" wants OP's brother to help sell them so that they appear to be getting sold by multiple people rather than a single box of "The same exact contents of what was just stolen a little bit ago" showing up on the market.

    – Shufflepants
    42 mins ago













    8














    TLDR: This is 100% a scam.




    My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately




    Let me rephrase: "my brother is 'fresh meat' -- he is new to this community so he doesn't know who is trustworthy; he has more money than he knows what to do with; he's got a taste of making good money and now wants more". That's all gold to a con man; that's their dream mark.




    Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details.




    Con men love it when marks "do them a favour" because it makes the con man seem vulnerable rather than threatening, and builds trust. People like doing favours, and I'm sure your brother is a nice person, but this favour was no accident. The car is fine. The con man asked your brother for "help" because your brother is the new mark in town.



    Think about it from the perspective of the con man. Suppose you have come up with a scam involving the mark believing that a baseball card they are holding is crazy valuable. What's the scam? Doesn't matter; the con man knows what it is. The key point is, for the scam to work you have to get the baseball cards in the mark's hands somehow.



    How are you going to do that?



    You need to establish a plausible reason to give the mark the "MacGuffin" -- the thing that motivates the behaviours needed for the scam -- and "in return for a favour" is just such a plausible reason.



    Now, I note that the reason must not be too plausible. Why not? Surely the con is better if the reasoning is more plausible, right?



    Wrong.



    Con men give you deliberately implausible stories because they are looking for marks who will believe implausible stories! They're not trying to con hardened skeptics!



    Your brother believed this barely-plausible story that this guy he doesn't know wants to go into business with him. Your brother is new to the community, and has ready cash, and believes barely-plausible stories. Of course the con man wants to be his new best friend!




    In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable.




    "Supposedly" is the key word, and good for you for using it. They are worthless.




    He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.




    Con men do that to again, build trust. Normal people are not in the habit of giving valuable items to people they just met.




    I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases.




    Those are a penny a dozen. That establishes nothing.



    True story: I have all 23 issues of the Marvel Doctor Who Comics reprint series from 1984 in just such plastic protective cases. They are not worth a quarter million dollars.




    My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable




    They are not. Your brother is not an expert in this field.




    asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.




    The con man wishes your brother to commit frauds on his behalf, and is keeping 70% of the profits in exchange for 0% of the going to jail when caught.



    Or, it's some other scam. Only the con man knows for sure, but it is 100% not legit, whatever it is.




    He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.




    It's the "his friend showed him" that is the key there. The "friend" is the one who entered the listings on Ebay. I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks.




    Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.




    The "he trusted him" is the key part. It is already too late; the con man has the confidence of your brother. The smart thing to do is for your brother to never speak to this person again, but that's not going to happen probably, and I'm sorry for that. Protect yourself. Do not loan your brother any money while he is still friends with this con man, because it will just go to some scheme.




    I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.




    Funny isn't it, how the "friend" knew exactly where to go on the internet to establish a high price, and exactly what sites to avoid that would warn people away from this scam.




    He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"




    All con men are "super cool". Charisma is a requirement of the job.



    All con men are people you just met. You don't suddenly get conned by your close personal friends you've known for decades.




    He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards




    The con man knows they are valueless.




    He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them




    "Too good to be true" and "appealing to your greed" are common characteristics of scams.




    My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return




    Nope. The con man is searching for kind newcomers with ready cash to be his marks. The "helping" was a set-up.



    There are frequently men whose "car ran out of gas" standing at the freeway entrance near my house, wearing cheap suits and waving briefcases at passing traffic, hoping for a "favour" from some kind, gullible person. There is no car, and it is not out of gas, and the briefcase is empty.




    He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy




    Do a web search on "union mafia connections" and decide whether being high up in a union is positively correlated with absolute trustworthiness. Sure, not all union leaders are mobsters, but that's not the question. The question is "are all union leaders automatically trustworthy?" and the answer is "no".




    There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money




    Just because you haven't figured out the scam does not mean it is not real! The con man knows the scam and is relying on your brother not figuring it out.




    So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam?




    Yep.




    Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?




    Nope.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

      – TemporalWolf
      40 mins ago















    8














    TLDR: This is 100% a scam.




    My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately




    Let me rephrase: "my brother is 'fresh meat' -- he is new to this community so he doesn't know who is trustworthy; he has more money than he knows what to do with; he's got a taste of making good money and now wants more". That's all gold to a con man; that's their dream mark.




    Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details.




    Con men love it when marks "do them a favour" because it makes the con man seem vulnerable rather than threatening, and builds trust. People like doing favours, and I'm sure your brother is a nice person, but this favour was no accident. The car is fine. The con man asked your brother for "help" because your brother is the new mark in town.



    Think about it from the perspective of the con man. Suppose you have come up with a scam involving the mark believing that a baseball card they are holding is crazy valuable. What's the scam? Doesn't matter; the con man knows what it is. The key point is, for the scam to work you have to get the baseball cards in the mark's hands somehow.



    How are you going to do that?



    You need to establish a plausible reason to give the mark the "MacGuffin" -- the thing that motivates the behaviours needed for the scam -- and "in return for a favour" is just such a plausible reason.



    Now, I note that the reason must not be too plausible. Why not? Surely the con is better if the reasoning is more plausible, right?



    Wrong.



    Con men give you deliberately implausible stories because they are looking for marks who will believe implausible stories! They're not trying to con hardened skeptics!



    Your brother believed this barely-plausible story that this guy he doesn't know wants to go into business with him. Your brother is new to the community, and has ready cash, and believes barely-plausible stories. Of course the con man wants to be his new best friend!




    In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable.




    "Supposedly" is the key word, and good for you for using it. They are worthless.




    He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.




    Con men do that to again, build trust. Normal people are not in the habit of giving valuable items to people they just met.




    I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases.




    Those are a penny a dozen. That establishes nothing.



    True story: I have all 23 issues of the Marvel Doctor Who Comics reprint series from 1984 in just such plastic protective cases. They are not worth a quarter million dollars.




    My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable




    They are not. Your brother is not an expert in this field.




    asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.




    The con man wishes your brother to commit frauds on his behalf, and is keeping 70% of the profits in exchange for 0% of the going to jail when caught.



    Or, it's some other scam. Only the con man knows for sure, but it is 100% not legit, whatever it is.




    He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.




    It's the "his friend showed him" that is the key there. The "friend" is the one who entered the listings on Ebay. I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks.




    Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.




    The "he trusted him" is the key part. It is already too late; the con man has the confidence of your brother. The smart thing to do is for your brother to never speak to this person again, but that's not going to happen probably, and I'm sorry for that. Protect yourself. Do not loan your brother any money while he is still friends with this con man, because it will just go to some scheme.




    I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.




    Funny isn't it, how the "friend" knew exactly where to go on the internet to establish a high price, and exactly what sites to avoid that would warn people away from this scam.




    He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"




    All con men are "super cool". Charisma is a requirement of the job.



    All con men are people you just met. You don't suddenly get conned by your close personal friends you've known for decades.




    He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards




    The con man knows they are valueless.




    He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them




    "Too good to be true" and "appealing to your greed" are common characteristics of scams.




    My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return




    Nope. The con man is searching for kind newcomers with ready cash to be his marks. The "helping" was a set-up.



    There are frequently men whose "car ran out of gas" standing at the freeway entrance near my house, wearing cheap suits and waving briefcases at passing traffic, hoping for a "favour" from some kind, gullible person. There is no car, and it is not out of gas, and the briefcase is empty.




    He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy




    Do a web search on "union mafia connections" and decide whether being high up in a union is positively correlated with absolute trustworthiness. Sure, not all union leaders are mobsters, but that's not the question. The question is "are all union leaders automatically trustworthy?" and the answer is "no".




    There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money




    Just because you haven't figured out the scam does not mean it is not real! The con man knows the scam and is relying on your brother not figuring it out.




    So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam?




    Yep.




    Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?




    Nope.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

      – TemporalWolf
      40 mins ago













    8












    8








    8







    TLDR: This is 100% a scam.




    My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately




    Let me rephrase: "my brother is 'fresh meat' -- he is new to this community so he doesn't know who is trustworthy; he has more money than he knows what to do with; he's got a taste of making good money and now wants more". That's all gold to a con man; that's their dream mark.




    Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details.




    Con men love it when marks "do them a favour" because it makes the con man seem vulnerable rather than threatening, and builds trust. People like doing favours, and I'm sure your brother is a nice person, but this favour was no accident. The car is fine. The con man asked your brother for "help" because your brother is the new mark in town.



    Think about it from the perspective of the con man. Suppose you have come up with a scam involving the mark believing that a baseball card they are holding is crazy valuable. What's the scam? Doesn't matter; the con man knows what it is. The key point is, for the scam to work you have to get the baseball cards in the mark's hands somehow.



    How are you going to do that?



    You need to establish a plausible reason to give the mark the "MacGuffin" -- the thing that motivates the behaviours needed for the scam -- and "in return for a favour" is just such a plausible reason.



    Now, I note that the reason must not be too plausible. Why not? Surely the con is better if the reasoning is more plausible, right?



    Wrong.



    Con men give you deliberately implausible stories because they are looking for marks who will believe implausible stories! They're not trying to con hardened skeptics!



    Your brother believed this barely-plausible story that this guy he doesn't know wants to go into business with him. Your brother is new to the community, and has ready cash, and believes barely-plausible stories. Of course the con man wants to be his new best friend!




    In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable.




    "Supposedly" is the key word, and good for you for using it. They are worthless.




    He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.




    Con men do that to again, build trust. Normal people are not in the habit of giving valuable items to people they just met.




    I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases.




    Those are a penny a dozen. That establishes nothing.



    True story: I have all 23 issues of the Marvel Doctor Who Comics reprint series from 1984 in just such plastic protective cases. They are not worth a quarter million dollars.




    My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable




    They are not. Your brother is not an expert in this field.




    asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.




    The con man wishes your brother to commit frauds on his behalf, and is keeping 70% of the profits in exchange for 0% of the going to jail when caught.



    Or, it's some other scam. Only the con man knows for sure, but it is 100% not legit, whatever it is.




    He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.




    It's the "his friend showed him" that is the key there. The "friend" is the one who entered the listings on Ebay. I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks.




    Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.




    The "he trusted him" is the key part. It is already too late; the con man has the confidence of your brother. The smart thing to do is for your brother to never speak to this person again, but that's not going to happen probably, and I'm sorry for that. Protect yourself. Do not loan your brother any money while he is still friends with this con man, because it will just go to some scheme.




    I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.




    Funny isn't it, how the "friend" knew exactly where to go on the internet to establish a high price, and exactly what sites to avoid that would warn people away from this scam.




    He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"




    All con men are "super cool". Charisma is a requirement of the job.



    All con men are people you just met. You don't suddenly get conned by your close personal friends you've known for decades.




    He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards




    The con man knows they are valueless.




    He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them




    "Too good to be true" and "appealing to your greed" are common characteristics of scams.




    My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return




    Nope. The con man is searching for kind newcomers with ready cash to be his marks. The "helping" was a set-up.



    There are frequently men whose "car ran out of gas" standing at the freeway entrance near my house, wearing cheap suits and waving briefcases at passing traffic, hoping for a "favour" from some kind, gullible person. There is no car, and it is not out of gas, and the briefcase is empty.




    He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy




    Do a web search on "union mafia connections" and decide whether being high up in a union is positively correlated with absolute trustworthiness. Sure, not all union leaders are mobsters, but that's not the question. The question is "are all union leaders automatically trustworthy?" and the answer is "no".




    There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money




    Just because you haven't figured out the scam does not mean it is not real! The con man knows the scam and is relying on your brother not figuring it out.




    So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam?




    Yep.




    Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?




    Nope.






    share|improve this answer















    TLDR: This is 100% a scam.




    My brother is working in a union and has met a bunch of people and started making good money lately




    Let me rephrase: "my brother is 'fresh meat' -- he is new to this community so he doesn't know who is trustworthy; he has more money than he knows what to do with; he's got a taste of making good money and now wants more". That's all gold to a con man; that's their dream mark.




    Yesterday, a colleague of his needed a favor because his car broke down, so my brother spent the night driving him home and dealing with a few other details.




    Con men love it when marks "do them a favour" because it makes the con man seem vulnerable rather than threatening, and builds trust. People like doing favours, and I'm sure your brother is a nice person, but this favour was no accident. The car is fine. The con man asked your brother for "help" because your brother is the new mark in town.



    Think about it from the perspective of the con man. Suppose you have come up with a scam involving the mark believing that a baseball card they are holding is crazy valuable. What's the scam? Doesn't matter; the con man knows what it is. The key point is, for the scam to work you have to get the baseball cards in the mark's hands somehow.



    How are you going to do that?



    You need to establish a plausible reason to give the mark the "MacGuffin" -- the thing that motivates the behaviours needed for the scam -- and "in return for a favour" is just such a plausible reason.



    Now, I note that the reason must not be too plausible. Why not? Surely the con is better if the reasoning is more plausible, right?



    Wrong.



    Con men give you deliberately implausible stories because they are looking for marks who will believe implausible stories! They're not trying to con hardened skeptics!



    Your brother believed this barely-plausible story that this guy he doesn't know wants to go into business with him. Your brother is new to the community, and has ready cash, and believes barely-plausible stories. Of course the con man wants to be his new best friend!




    In return (or maybe not, unsure of the details), this guy offered to have my brother sell some baseball cards that the colleague had, some of which were supposedly extremely valuable.




    "Supposedly" is the key word, and good for you for using it. They are worthless.




    He then gave my brother a sleeve of the cards he had without any monetary exchange.




    Con men do that to again, build trust. Normal people are not in the habit of giving valuable items to people they just met.




    I took a look at the cards this morning and each card is in those plastic protective cases.




    Those are a penny a dozen. That establishes nothing.



    True story: I have all 23 issues of the Marvel Doctor Who Comics reprint series from 1984 in just such plastic protective cases. They are not worth a quarter million dollars.




    My brother was telling me about how some of them were pretty valuable




    They are not. Your brother is not an expert in this field.




    asked him to help sell them, and in return he'd get a third of the cut.




    The con man wishes your brother to commit frauds on his behalf, and is keeping 70% of the profits in exchange for 0% of the going to jail when caught.



    Or, it's some other scam. Only the con man knows for sure, but it is 100% not legit, whatever it is.




    He then showed me the specific most valuable card, a 1990 Jose Uribe, which was, according to him, one of the first error cards, and one of only 1000 others. He showed me how it was printed off-center, such that the padding on the right was about twice as much as on the left. This card was supposedly worth $250,000 and he said how his friend showed him listings for it on eBay in that price range.




    It's the "his friend showed him" that is the key there. The "friend" is the one who entered the listings on Ebay. I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks.




    Well, having read a lot on money.se and around the Internet about how scams work, I was immediately suspicious and told him some basic rules on how to avoid scams (don't give him money first, make sure checks don't bounce, etc) and he said that his friend was super cool, that he trusted him, but that he would be careful.




    The "he trusted him" is the key part. It is already too late; the con man has the confidence of your brother. The smart thing to do is for your brother to never speak to this person again, but that's not going to happen probably, and I'm sorry for that. Protect yourself. Do not loan your brother any money while he is still friends with this con man, because it will just go to some scheme.




    I later searched "Jose Uribe error card" on Google and was immediately met with links saying that the card wasn't valuable and you shouldn't buy it for $250,000. This made me more suspicious about the rest of the cards, and I wonder if this could somehow really be an elaborate scam.




    Funny isn't it, how the "friend" knew exactly where to go on the internet to establish a high price, and exactly what sites to avoid that would warn people away from this scam.




    He's only known him for 3 weeks, and he's "super cool"




    All con men are "super cool". Charisma is a requirement of the job.



    All con men are people you just met. You don't suddenly get conned by your close personal friends you've known for decades.




    He just willingly handed over (what he thought was) hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards




    The con man knows they are valueless.




    He's giving my brother a large percentage of the cut, after my brother specifically sells them




    "Too good to be true" and "appealing to your greed" are common characteristics of scams.




    My brother actually helped him first and he's doing this in return




    Nope. The con man is searching for kind newcomers with ready cash to be his marks. The "helping" was a set-up.



    There are frequently men whose "car ran out of gas" standing at the freeway entrance near my house, wearing cheap suits and waving briefcases at passing traffic, hoping for a "favour" from some kind, gullible person. There is no car, and it is not out of gas, and the briefcase is empty.




    He's a higher ranking guy in his union so my brother says he's more senior and trustworthy




    Do a web search on "union mafia connections" and decide whether being high up in a union is positively correlated with absolute trustworthiness. Sure, not all union leaders are mobsters, but that's not the question. The question is "are all union leaders automatically trustworthy?" and the answer is "no".




    There doesn't seem like any possibility of the sort of double/take-back exchange that happens in any common scam, it seems like my brother will simply sell the cards, and split the money




    Just because you haven't figured out the scam does not mean it is not real! The con man knows the scam and is relying on your brother not figuring it out.




    So, regardless of the true value of a Jose Uribe error card, is this an elaborate scam?




    Yep.




    Or could my brother be on track to make a legitimate quick buck selling these cards on eBay?




    Nope.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 5 mins ago

























    answered 53 mins ago









    Eric LippertEric Lippert

    3,0611016




    3,0611016







    • 2





      "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

      – TemporalWolf
      40 mins ago












    • 2





      "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

      – TemporalWolf
      40 mins ago







    2




    2





    "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

    – TemporalWolf
    40 mins ago





    "I could list a ham sandwich for a million bucks on Ebay. That does not establish the price of ham sandwiches at a million bucks." I always love seeing articles about "Childhood thing could be worth $$$$! See someone selling it on ebay for $250k!" Funny how you never see any sold at that price.

    – TemporalWolf
    40 mins ago











    0














    Honestly it sounds like your Internet searches so far have been not very effective. "This card is not worth $250,000" is not what I would expect to find in search results; "this card [picture here] typically sells for between $4.20 and $5.70" would be what I'd expect to find.



    So you may want to "up your game" in your internet searches. For instance find a bona-fide trading card site that actually talks about card values. Alternately, search eBay and then click "Completed auctions" on the left edge (I don't know where it is on a phone), and look at the green auctions which did sell (the red auctions were failed auctions due to absurd prices no one was willing to pay). Read the listings to see if those items are comparable to these.



    Assuming your brother possesses a smartphone, I presume he can also spread them out in a well-lit spot, maybe 16 cards at a time, and snap a clear photo of them... Then email that photo to a card trading company which he may also find on the Net. They should be able to give him a quote.



    If your brother wants to financially self-destruct, just make sure you don't have any financial connections to him (nothing co-signed, no joint property etc.) and then step back and watch him learn expensive lessons that he could learn for free from a book.






    share|improve this answer



























      0














      Honestly it sounds like your Internet searches so far have been not very effective. "This card is not worth $250,000" is not what I would expect to find in search results; "this card [picture here] typically sells for between $4.20 and $5.70" would be what I'd expect to find.



      So you may want to "up your game" in your internet searches. For instance find a bona-fide trading card site that actually talks about card values. Alternately, search eBay and then click "Completed auctions" on the left edge (I don't know where it is on a phone), and look at the green auctions which did sell (the red auctions were failed auctions due to absurd prices no one was willing to pay). Read the listings to see if those items are comparable to these.



      Assuming your brother possesses a smartphone, I presume he can also spread them out in a well-lit spot, maybe 16 cards at a time, and snap a clear photo of them... Then email that photo to a card trading company which he may also find on the Net. They should be able to give him a quote.



      If your brother wants to financially self-destruct, just make sure you don't have any financial connections to him (nothing co-signed, no joint property etc.) and then step back and watch him learn expensive lessons that he could learn for free from a book.






      share|improve this answer

























        0












        0








        0







        Honestly it sounds like your Internet searches so far have been not very effective. "This card is not worth $250,000" is not what I would expect to find in search results; "this card [picture here] typically sells for between $4.20 and $5.70" would be what I'd expect to find.



        So you may want to "up your game" in your internet searches. For instance find a bona-fide trading card site that actually talks about card values. Alternately, search eBay and then click "Completed auctions" on the left edge (I don't know where it is on a phone), and look at the green auctions which did sell (the red auctions were failed auctions due to absurd prices no one was willing to pay). Read the listings to see if those items are comparable to these.



        Assuming your brother possesses a smartphone, I presume he can also spread them out in a well-lit spot, maybe 16 cards at a time, and snap a clear photo of them... Then email that photo to a card trading company which he may also find on the Net. They should be able to give him a quote.



        If your brother wants to financially self-destruct, just make sure you don't have any financial connections to him (nothing co-signed, no joint property etc.) and then step back and watch him learn expensive lessons that he could learn for free from a book.






        share|improve this answer













        Honestly it sounds like your Internet searches so far have been not very effective. "This card is not worth $250,000" is not what I would expect to find in search results; "this card [picture here] typically sells for between $4.20 and $5.70" would be what I'd expect to find.



        So you may want to "up your game" in your internet searches. For instance find a bona-fide trading card site that actually talks about card values. Alternately, search eBay and then click "Completed auctions" on the left edge (I don't know where it is on a phone), and look at the green auctions which did sell (the red auctions were failed auctions due to absurd prices no one was willing to pay). Read the listings to see if those items are comparable to these.



        Assuming your brother possesses a smartphone, I presume he can also spread them out in a well-lit spot, maybe 16 cards at a time, and snap a clear photo of them... Then email that photo to a card trading company which he may also find on the Net. They should be able to give him a quote.



        If your brother wants to financially self-destruct, just make sure you don't have any financial connections to him (nothing co-signed, no joint property etc.) and then step back and watch him learn expensive lessons that he could learn for free from a book.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 16 mins ago









        HarperHarper

        24.8k63788




        24.8k63788




















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