Nowaker
TUG Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2021
- Messages
- 1,177
- Reaction score
- 955
- Location
- Wilson County, Texas
- Resorts Owned
- HGVC: 41,520 points - Coylumbridge, Flamingo, Elara, Trump, 2x Boulevard
Here's a copy of the statement, exactly as I filed it with Elara's manager & security:
I wanted to warn you guys. Don't fall for it like I did! It's the first time I've been scammed - ever! As for my card, the moment it was hit with $2,025 transaction from Priceline, I immediately blocked it, requested replacement, and reported transactions as fraud. Then, headed to the manager's desk to report this incident.
I gotta say, the scheme was pulled off really well. There's no way it's not an inside job. They knew too much - not only about my request (sheets and bags) - but also the room number, and timing of everything. It was too precise to be a random act of phishing. The scammers were tipped. No doubt about it. Hopefully Elara security finds the dark sheep.
On 12/30, 5.12pm, I texted 702-XXX-YYYY - your front desk PBX service and asked for:
1. a new pair of sheets for pullout sofa
2. bags from bell service - ticket XXX.
A couple minutes later bell service called my room phone and told me they would be bringing my bags in 5-10 mins. And they did. When the bell was unloading the bags I received another call on the hotel phone. The person, female, told she's calling from the front desk, and the have a problem with my deposit credit card and they'd like a different card to hold. I questioned this as a scam but she assured me it was not by telling me "how would I not be from the front desk if I knew about your sheets and bags request?". This was a strong argument as I did ask for sheets and bags. This suggests it is an inside job. Someone sent a tip - room number and background info - to pull out a scam.
I wanted to warn you guys. Don't fall for it like I did! It's the first time I've been scammed - ever! As for my card, the moment it was hit with $2,025 transaction from Priceline, I immediately blocked it, requested replacement, and reported transactions as fraud. Then, headed to the manager's desk to report this incident.
I gotta say, the scheme was pulled off really well. There's no way it's not an inside job. They knew too much - not only about my request (sheets and bags) - but also the room number, and timing of everything. It was too precise to be a random act of phishing. The scammers were tipped. No doubt about it. Hopefully Elara security finds the dark sheep.
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