Over the past four years, Clark has gotten lots of phone calls about phony cashiers check scams. But over the past four months, those calls have been replaced by questions about a new counterfeit scam that has taken its place. Starting about Thanksgiving of last year, calls started coming into the show about phony money orders. Basically, criminals are using phony money orders to buy items through classified ads, on eBay and from retailers, and the phony forms look perfect. The New York Times published a comparison graphic recently that showed a legitimate USPS money order next to a fake one and they looked exactly the same. The reason cashiers checks and money orders are so popular with criminals is that they havent changed much over recent decades. We need some type of electronic verification with these services before more people get taken.
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Once you have confirmed that a money order is fake, what should one do with it.....turn it into the police, turn it back into the company that issued it (in this case....moneygram.com), etc.?