Gary - the way most internet scams work is via telephone.
if you see an ad for a Jeep, boat, car, truck or whatever, with a killer price,
greed normally drives the uneducated into the seller's trap.
it works like this - - - you start off by email, then the seller says to call
his private cell to set up the deal. all this is done withOUT seeing the article
for sale. a deposit of $2500 is sent via moneygram, western union, etc and
the article will be shipped the next day with balance of the sale due upon delivery.
of course there is no delivery - and the uneducated person is out of $2500.
that can buy an awful lot of groceries for the household.
and once they have your phone number, they can be relentless in their aggressive
calls threatening you with FBI investigation, IRS holding your pay, all sorts of threats.
the best one I have seen so far is a John Deere tractor for sale in the Farm n Garden
section of CL..... $20,000 value selling for $5,250. awesome photos of this tractor
in a big hay field with small mountains in the background of the picture and the ad says it is for sale in Orlando.....
hahahahaha There is no place in Orlando for a hay field, much less mountains.
so if the ad photos do not match your geographic area, that is another clue.
the seller asking for your shipping address, phone number and credit card# is another.
millions and millions of US Dollars leave this country every day to scammers.
common sense and due diligence is the key to a safe transaction anywhere.