It works like this: some shady sleazebag copies an expired Craigslist housing ad and reposts it, with a slightly lower price, back on the site. Next, a curious apartment hunter spots the ad and emails the shady sleazebag seeking more info. Now the heist takes place. The apartment hunter receives a long-winded, typo-ridden email from the landlord claiming to be a noble volunteer worker helping children in Africa or saving kittens in Asia. The apartment-hunter can move in by weeks end, the message says, if he or she simply mails a deposit to a crazy address in Nigeria and waits for the house keys to be shipped back.
Most peoples bullshit detectors begin buzzing right about the time an anonymous person asks for money up front, but, sadly, some people dont possess that piece of equipment, and they wind up losing several hundred dollars and a boatload of dignity. Police in Santa Cruz and San Jose say the scams have become so prevalent that there are times when a quarter of the housing ads on Craigslist are rip-offs. Santa Cruz Police Spokesman Zach Friend offers simple advice: If you just remember not to ever send money until youve met with a landlord in person and gotten it in writing, you should be OK. Of course, one argument says anyone dumb enough to wire money to Nigeria for an apartment in Santa Cruz deserves to get ripped off.


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Dapo Ogundimu USA Mon, Aug 17, 2009 - 10:41 am
I totally agree that “anyone dumb enough to wire money to Nigeria for an apartment in Santa Cruz deserves to get ripped off.” But Craigslist can help the situation by screening who places adds in the papers and furnishing such information to the law enforcement agencies.There is got to be a way to protect innocent renters though they must be stupid to be sending money via Western Union to NIGERIA. Are these renters really that Dumb? And this is what am thinking.