Fake Internet Yellow Pages Scam Shut Down

How did a fake internet yellow pages company scam people in the US, Canada, and Australia?

Since 2009, a company based in Palma de Mallorca, Spain has used British and Dutch based corporations to send unsolicited emails to numerous small organization, in the hope of scamming those organizations out of money.

Implicitly pretending affiliation with the Yellow Pages, this company faxed forms to organizations under the pretense of having a preexisting relationship with those organizations. Then, confident with the pseudo-Yellow Page company’s credentials, organizations would reply to the scam company under the assumption that they were simply renewing their Yellow Pages information. What they did not know, however, was that in the fine print the scam company induced the unassuming organizations into registration in a separate online directory, at the rate of $89/month.

What has the FTC done as a result of the scam?

When organizations came to understand their predicament, and that they had entered into agreements with the fraudulent company under false assumptions, the FTC began taking a keen interest in the issue. After repeated instances, the FTC determined that the Mallorca based company indubitably sought to defraud these organizations. Upon that revelation, the FTC persuaded a federal judge to halt all transactions taking place between Americans and the European-based company.

To be sure, the Mallorca-based company did indicate its intent in the small print attached to the information sheets sent out to organizations and individuals. However, given the implicit representation the entire remainder of the fax conveys, many feel that Americans deserve justice. The FTC has recently declared that it desires nothing less than for the Mallorca company to refund all people defrauded by this scheme.

What has the response from other countries been to the scam?

Canada, Australia, and perhaps other countries have felt the effects of the Mallorca-based fraudsters. The Canadian Competition Bureau specifically has worked vigorously with the FTC in the past to stamp out schemes like this one, with the intention of defrauding consumers. In this most recent example, concerning the Mallorca-based organization, the Canadian Competition Bureau joined the FTC by filing suit against this organization which they feel has led to business losses by small businesses and organizations in Canada.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, likewise, has previously brought action against the Mallorca company’s actions done to consumers in Australia. With the help and advice of these organizations, the FTC seeks now to prevent Americans and others in countries, potentially, across the globe, in preventing the Mallorca company from further being able to defraud and deceive unwitting consumers into their scheme.

David Athey: MLM Spammer Wins Prizes

david athey spammer

Is spammer David Athey stupid?

Who is David Athey?

That’s a good question. I’ve had no dealings with David Athey until today. David Athey is the MLM / network marketer who spammed my inbox today with his flopportunity.

David Athey Spam Email

Here’s the text of the spam email received today from David Athey. I’ve redacted only contact info from it.

——– Original Message ——–
Subject:     Michael Young?
Date:     Mon, 22 Aug 2011 04:13:18 -0500
From:     David Athey <david@2020national.com>
Reply-To:     david@2020national.com
To:     [the Internet lawyer I was dumb enough to spam]

Hello Michael

My name is David Athey, I am contacting you from my home in Pagosa Springs Colorado.  For about nine-years I have run my own home business, and I have a question to ask you.

If there was a business that actually made sense, you could earn $20-$50K in the next 6-12 months working part-time from home; you didn’t have to stock, sell, collect money or deliver products, there is no large investment, no strings, and absolutely no one can get hurt, would you be open to learning more about it?

The company is an established online catalog shopping company with competitively priced, environmentally friendly household and personal care products.  They handle
all the details and pay us on every order, every month, for the life of the customer.
Personally, we have about 200 customers who have been with us since that first year.

In addition to that, our group has a specially developed leads system to keep our business partners supplied with quality leads, up to 400 qualified network marketer leads per-month at no cost to you  – we give them to you to help you grow.

My first year, I worked hard and made about $70K from home with a computer and a telephone – no hotel meetings.  We did not have the leads program then, and I paid for leads.  For the past few years, my wife and I have been traveling in a luxury RV, we love the life style and love working with like-minded people all over the US and Canada.

Please understand, this is not a get-rich-quick scheme, initially it will take hard work and consistent effort, but if you are willing to learn, and work hard it pays very well
on a residual level.

Do you have 15-minutes so I can give you the details, and you can do your due diligence?   Naturally, there is no obligation, and you would never send me a dime in any event.

Michael, is (***) ***-**** still a good number to reach you at in TX?
So you know, your info came to us from a website you may have had, or a company directory, somewhere in the public domain.

Please reply to this message, I hope to hear from you soon.

Thank you for your time, and have a great day!

Respectfully,

David Athey
970-731-1571

This email was sent as Business-to-Business correspondence from David Athey POB-3862, Pagosa Springs, CO 81147, in compliance with the CAN SPAM act.  If you no longer wish to receive correspondence from me, please reply with   No Thank You  in the subject line.   Thank you again for your time.

Deceptive David Athey

David Athey apparently scraped my email address and phone number from some site and then pretended this was a Business-to-Business (B2B) communication instead of unsolicited commercial email (UCE), a.k.a. spam for his network marketing flopportunity. Note to David Athey — replying to your spam is an invitation for further spam from you and other jerks like you who swap and sell email lists.

David Athey also plays cute with income claims. Note the weasel words used to imply that one “could earn $20-$50K in the next 6-12 months working part-time from home; you didn’t have to stock, sell, collect money or deliver products, there is no large investment, no strings, and absolutely no one can get hurt, would you be open to learning more about it?” Name one MLM / network marketing company where these claims are typical for the average person who joins?

Prizes Won by David Athey today

  • Inquiry to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) about David Athey’s violations of federal law.
  • Inquiry to the Colorado and Texas Attorneys General about David Athey’s violations of state law.
  • Inquiry to the Texas Comptroller and Texas Secretary of State about whether David Athey has qualified to do business in the state.

Congratulations to spammer David Athey. He’s hit the jackpot by making the decision to spam an Internet lawyer.

Jeremy Johnson: iWorks Alleged Internet Con Artist Stuck In Jail

jeremy johnson iworks

Will iWorks Jeremy Johnson remain in jail?

What is Jeremy Johnson accused of having done?

Jeremy Johnson, his company IWorks, and several associates and related entities were sued by the Federal Trade Commission last December.

The FTC suspects that Johnson engaged in using shell companies and false advertisements involving government and private grants. While maintaining his innocence throughout the legal process, Johnson has enjoyed particular media attention due to a degree of fame attached to him. Well known for using his personal helicopters to both rescue individuals lost in the rugged Utah terrain near where he lives, and to fly doctors to Haiti following the earthquake there in 2008, Johnson has awaited trial in jail since June, 2011.

Why has Jeremy Johnson been denied bail?

On June 12, when federal officials arrested Jeremy Johnson in a Phoenix airport, Johnson had on his person $26,400 in cash, and a one way ticket to Costa Rica. Since then, officials have remained reluctant to release Johnson on bail for fear that he might flee the country. Johnson has claimed that the one-way ticket to Costa Rica and the large amount of cash on his person result from favorable currency exchange rates once inside Costa Rica, and from cheaper return deals when booked separately.

Johnson has also claimed that he does not serve as a flight risk because all of his family and friends live around Utah, and that he would not leave them behind to flee to another country. However, this argument and others have not persuaded federal agents to allow Johnson out of jail, even on bail of one million dollars. A federal magistrate as recently as Thursday, August 1 ruled against Johnson leaving jail before trial.

What prevented the federal magistrate from allowing Jeremy Johnson out of jail?

Under subpoena, Las Vegas businessman Chad Elie presented testimony seemingly indicative of Johnson’s ability and potential desire to flee the country. A co-owner of one of Johnson’s businesses, Elie currently is under criminal indictment from a New York federal part for playing an active role in illegally processing gambling payments. Concerning Johnson’s continued incarceration, Elie testified about what he witnessed while riding in one of Johnson’s private helicopter.

Specifically, Elie commented that Jeremy Johnson displayed numerous places against the mountainous Utah background where gold and cash were hidden. Places Johnson hid gold and money included on mountains, and submerged under lakes. Elie’s further claims that Johnson hid the monetary items to have secret stores of cash in case Johnson got involved with federal agents convinced the federal magistrate that Jeremy Johnson should not be allowed to leave federal custody at this time.