scam

Two people came to my house asking about an apartment. I had no idea what was going on, but saw pictures of my house on online rental ads. Now what?

If unknown people are showing up at your home looking to rent an apartment you never advertised, your house may be caught up in a scam.
January 14, 2026 Sasha Wren
a jobseeker

I paid $500 for a “guaranteed job placement” service. The job turned out to be a pyramid scheme. What can I do?

It started with a promise that felt almost impossible to resist. A guaranteed job placement, a clear path to financial stability, and a website polished enough to quiet any doubts. The testimonials sounded sincere, and the person on the call spoke with the kind of confidence that makes hesitation feel unnecessary. Paying $500 seemed less like a risk and more like buying peace of mind. For a moment, everything lined up—welcome emails, orientation videos, plenty of talk about “unlocking potential”. Then the cracks appeared, and the confidence faded as the training looked nothing like the job it was supposed to lead to. The assignments that followed raised even more questions. Instead of tasks related to the promised role, there were instructions to invite friends to “opportunity webinars” and post vague motivational lines online. Whenever clarity was requested, the answers became increasingly indirect. Eventually, it hit with uncomfortable heaviness: this wasn’t a job. It was a cleverly disguised recruitment scheme, one where income depended on persuading others to sign up and pay the same fee. That moment of realization was frustrating and embarrassing, but once the sting settled, a more important question took its place—what now?
December 30, 2025 Peter Kinney

As Dad’s executor, I let my brother have his inheritance before probate. He wired it all to a woman he met online and the estate owes taxes. Now what?

If you are the executor and distributed funds to heirs before the estate cleared probate, you may be facing serious consequences. We look at ways to recover the situation.
October 10, 2025 Sammy Tran

My mom has early Alzheimer’s and made reckless purchases, but when I asked the bank to cancel her account and credit cards, they refused. What now?

Your mom has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and it’s affecting her judgment, but the bank can't cancel her accounts without some key legal steps. Here are the steps you can take to protect her assets.
September 23, 2025 Penelope Singh
scaminternal

Retail Workers Share The Desperate Scams Customers Have Tried To Pull

In the world of retail, you come across a lot of interesting things. Expect to deal with bad customers, strange demands, and a whole lot of desperate scams.
January 22, 2019 Eul Basa