You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Britain
UK petrol station scam run by Tamil Tigers
2007-04-23
Posted by:Seafarious

#6  Put a Tiger in your tank!
Posted by: Jackal   2007-04-23 21:55  

#5  Grunter, be sure to get up periodically and move around. If you're on a 747, use the bottom of the stairs to do some leg stretching exercises. Drink plenty of water (it'll motivate you to get up), and be sure to bring with you a long book by a good author. Buy a stack of postcards and write to all your friends during the flight. Carry on your own supply of dried fruit and salty snacks and try to enjoy the ride. Don't forget to ask the flight attendent for some of those "captain's wings" to give the kids at your destination.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-04-23 14:02  

#4  Thanks a bunch for the encouraging words, Zenster. I fly New York to Sydney tomorrow.
Back on topic: folks, always take a good look at the card slot when you use an ATM, especially one in a business, ( ie not a bank) My card got cloned in Sydney a few years back, at a gas station BTW, and about a month later it went on a $5000 spending spree in London- Cartier jewellers, Harrods, etc. Meanwhile I was way out in Central Australia, and just happened to go online as the purchases were coming in. Big surprise!
Posted by: Grunter   2007-04-23 12:29  

#3  Point taken. I didn't realize that 750,000 Brits visit Thailand each year. That must be the plane ride from Hell. About half-way around the world. I've done a 12 time zone trip before and it was murder coming and going.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-04-23 04:22  

#2  Zen, not really. It is kind of usual traffic, it is a faved vacationing spot for reasons... let's not go there, just let's say they may be compelling. ;-).

That's why it was a brilliant choice by the scammers. But eventually, every scam unravels.
Posted by: twobyfour   2007-04-23 01:38  

#1  The inquiries began in Hull and spread to Leeds, Liverpool, Edinburgh, Norfolk, Peterborough, Bristol and Nottingham. The fraudsters used machinery to “skim” data from credit and debit cards, which was transferred to bogus cards. Card details cloned in Britain have been used to obtain funds in Thailand.

Did no one at the banks get slightly suspicious when the credit accounts of ordinary British citizens began showing a cluster of debitting traffic in Thailand?
Posted by: Zenster   2007-04-23 00:58  

00:00