PDA

View Full Version : %$$^#@%$ ING SCAMMERS.



ZR
08-11-2017, 06:42 AM
A Toronto woman and her five friends were shocked to realize the tickets they purchased from a third party for Montreal’s Osheaga music festival were illegitimate – and she says they weren’t the only ones.
Rina Estafanos and her friends planned their travel to Montreal from Toronto a few months ago only to learn that their wristbands were illegitimate.
“We were really excited,” Estafanos told CTV News Toronto on Thursday. “It’s a bit of an event – you have to go to a completely different province but it was well worth it until we found out that the tickets were illegitimate.”
Estafanos said she came across the tickets after posting an ad on Kijiji saying she was looking for six wristbands to the festival that took place from August 4 to 6.
She said a man reached out to her saying he was selling six tickets as he was going to Cancun during that time and wanted to get rid of his tickets.


<iframe scrolling="no" frameborder="0" style="outline: 0px; font-size: 28.8px; line-height: 1.6; vertical-align: baseline; width: 1px; height: 1px; margin: 0px !important; padding: 0px !important; border-width: 0px !important; border-style: initial !important; overflow: hidden !important; float: none !important;"></iframe>


After ensuring that the wristbands were able to be registered by calling Osheaga customer service, Estafanos met the man at Union Station to pick up the tickets.
She paid $1,400 in cash for the six tickets.
“I asked him for a receipt of the purchase,” Estafanos said. “I asked him to checkout his driver’s license to know that this was the person I was talking to and I even registered the bands at the time of the purchase.”
But, Estafanos said that when they got to the festival on the first day “none of that turned out to matter.”
“My heart just dropped – it was awful,” she said. “We came on a long journey to be there and then to be told ‘I don’t know what’s going on, you’ve got to go to will call these (wristbands) are no good’ that was really sad, really disappointing.”
When the group went to will call, Estafanos says they were told the tickets were illegitimate and their wristbands were added to a bucket filled with other illegitimate wristbands.
“There were hundreds of wristbands in there,” she said.
While sorting out purchasing their new wristbands from will call – which ended up costing them an additional $2,000, Estafanos said they spoke to people who also purchased illegitimate wristbands from the same person.
“Apparently he had gone the distance – there were some people we met from Montreal and Ottawa who were attesting to this as well,” she said.
After returning home from the festival, Estafanos says she started seeing a photo of the man circulating on social media.
“I hope he gets caught,” she said. “It’s not fair what he’s doing and it’s quite a bit of money that he took from a lot of people – a lot of very upset festival-goers.”
Estafanos said the tickets the man was selling to people, including herself, were purchased in a large quantity through Osheaga’s website and were processed through a credit card but were never paid for prior to the dates of the festival.
CTV News Toronto attempted to contact the suspect using the phone number that he was reached at by Estafanos but the calls were not returned.
Estafanos says she has filed a police report on this matter in the hopes of getting her money back.

RedSN
08-11-2017, 08:57 AM
I really do watch too much TV.
Just watched an episode of "Difficult People" with the exact same plot.

http://deadshirt.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Difficult.People.S02E08.jpg


Julie shows up at the café having skipped lunch with her mom. She’s excited: She scored tickets to the musical Hashtag Cats via Craigslist. Julie buys the tickets from the Craigslist guy, but they turn out to be fake, causing her to launch a one-woman, burn-the-forest-and-salt-the-earth campaign against him, in the form of abusive voice-mails and texts. (On her podcast last year, Klausner recounted that she was herself scammed out of Hamilton tickets and responded exactly as the Julie character does here.)

StAnger
08-13-2017, 12:48 AM
Jebus $2400 (total) for an Indie Music Festival? Sounds like a complete waste of money.

83 5.0
08-13-2017, 09:12 PM
Not sure how tickets get purchased with a credit card and the payment doesn't go through, but tickets are sent? The fact they could register these tickets with osheaga makes me think they have a hole in their registration software this guy is exploiting.

ZR
08-13-2017, 09:44 PM
^ Exactly what I was thinking.

Ponyryd
08-13-2017, 09:55 PM
Not sure how tickets get purchased with a credit card and the payment doesn't go through, but tickets are sent? The fact they could register these tickets with osheaga makes me think they have a hole in their registration software this guy is exploiting.

Agreed, in which case the tickets should be legit, their mistake, not the customers.

ZR
08-13-2017, 09:57 PM
After ensuring that the wristbands were able to be registered by calling Osheaga customer service, Estafanos met the man at Union Station to pick up the tickets

Something stinks in this story.

allicedout
08-14-2017, 07:30 AM
I've bought tickets off of people on Kijiji in the past, but since more and more people have been getting ripped off I've stopped buying and selling tickets period. Just not worth it.

ZR
08-14-2017, 07:42 AM
Had more than one event I'd have liked to attend but can't bring myself to buy off Kijiji or similar.