Amazon shopper faces up to 20 years in jail for $290,000 fraud.

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An Amazon shopper faces up to 20 years in jail for $290,000 fraud. Prosecutors say he bought Apple, Asus, and Fuji products, then mailed cheaper items as returns.

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Kevin Shalvey
October 9, 2021·3 min read
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Hudson Hamrick faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images

  • An Amazon shopper pleaded guilty to more than $290,000 in fraud for mailing fake returns.

  • Prosecutors said Hudson Hamrick, of North Carolina, bought expensive items then returned cheap ones.

  • Amazon noticed the fraudulent returns, which began in 2016, and referred the case to the FBI.
An Amazon shopper who for five years bought expensive items - including a top-of-the-line iMac Pro - and then mailed cheaper items as returns faces up to 20 years in prison for wire fraud, prosecutors said.

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Hudson Hamrick, of Charlotte, North Carolina, on Tuesday pleaded guilty in the US District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, a court filing showed.

The Department of Justice also issued a statement on Tuesday that said Hamrick faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Hamrick's public defender did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

US attorneys filed charges against Hamrick in September, saying he'd engaged in about 300 fraudulent transactions with Amazon. That included about 270 product returns - some 250 of which were "materially different in value" - that amounted to more than $290,000 in total fraud, said the charging document and another that detailed several transactions as part of Hamrick's plea agreement.

Many of the transactions followed a simple pattern, prosecutors said: Hamrick would order an expensive item, initiate a return, then mail a similar - but less valuable - item. Sometimes he'd also sell the expensive item, netting him both the return and the resale value, prosecutors said.

In August 2019, for example, Hamrick ordered an Apple iMac Pro for $4,256.85, the US attorneys said. After about two weeks, Hamrick started the return process with Amazon, which then issued a refund.

"Instead of returning the high-end iMac Pro, Hamrick returned a much older, less valuable non-Pro model with a completely different serial number," said a court document filed by Maria K. Vento, an assistant US attorney.

A week before Hamrick initiated his Amazon return, he sold an iMac Pro on eBay, Vento said.

Prosecutors said the items Hamrick ordered included a Jura GIGA W3 Professional coffee machine for $3,536.46; an Asus ROG Zephyrus gaming laptop for $2,776.52; and a Fuji Spray system for $1,227.31. Each time, he returned a lower-value item or older model, prosecutors said.

An Amazon spokesperson told Insider that the tech giant discovered the alleged fraud and referred the case to law enforcement. It worked with the FBI and the US attorney's office in North Carolina.

"Amazon has systems in place to detect suspicious behavior, and teams in place to investigate and stop prohibited activity," the spokesperson said. "There is no place for fraud at Amazon, and we will continue to pursue all measures to hold bad actors accountable."

Read the original article on Business Insider
 
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Zero

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People actually do this all the time... every day really.

You would be shocked how often this old return scheme is used.
Even in store :wow:



[Verse Two]
You pretty decent (Thanks)
Maybe you ready for recent schemes (I'm ready, dawg)
I've been pulling off with my team
Like this one here
Believe me not too much is required (Okay)
You need to be convincing and a professional liar (..professional liar...)
You need balls and you need to be chill
Under pressure and I'll teach you how to legally steal (huh, legally steal?)
Don't worry about the cameras
Don't worry about the people (Alright)
Only be concerned if the cashier sees you (Okay, why's that?)
You see the cashier's important in this stunt (Alright...)
Cause they're the dummies who gon' give you anything you want (Anything I want?)
Before you even start, know you need to scout the slob
You know, the type that look like they don't care about they job (That's a definite)
Now look for something expensive like that computer tower
That is what you're gonna take up to the counter (Take it to the counter?)
Now look the cashier in the eye, don't get nervous
With a smile say "I would like to return this" (HEHE, Damn!)
They might want a reason
If they ask it
Tell 'em you bought if for your mom and she already has it (Okay)
They'll ask you for a receipt, you won't regret it
Tell 'em you don't have it, they'll give you in store credit (shyt!)
This works for most stores except for those fronting (Damn!)
Congratulations, you just legally stole something (Aw, hell naw!)
Go try that shyt, I know you eager to earn
I'ma act like I ain't with you, let's see what you learn
 

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Don't understand serial numbers, brehs.

Also this.

I know ppl who return broken items like airpods or expensive vacuum cleaners after about of year of use.

They buy a new one, put the older one in the box, and send it back.

But as you said all of those have individual serial numbers, and you have an amazon history of buying the same thing over and over again. Even a dummy could figure out your scheme if they took 2 seconds to look at your account
 

Thavoiceofthevoiceless

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People actually do this all the time... every day really.

You would be shocked how often this old return scheme is used.

I'm not going to lie. I did it with some Nike sweatpants one time. I bought a new pants, while returning the used ones.

In my defense, they said you have 30 days to wear the item and return it if you don't like it :yeshrug:
 
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