Complaint Review: National Care Planning Council- Bradley Austin - Olive Branch MS
- National Care Planning Council- Bradley Austin Olive Branch, MS United States
- Phone:
- Web:
- Category: Fraud, Bank fraud, Human Resources , Scammers, Business Opportunity Scam
National Care Planning Council- Bradley Austin They offered me a job, and it was a scam and they ended up taking my account information and taking over 1,000 Olive Branch MS
*Consumer Comment: It takes two...
This company and guy named Bradley Austin offered me a Job with National Care Planning Council and offered me $40 an hour and $30 an hour for training. He gave me a $3150.00 check that was hot and printed online. The company Vicom is aware of the scam. He had me go get 2 $100 iTunes gift cards for my learning materials. Later that afternoon I was informed of the scam and got online to find the cards were redeemed. I confronted him this morning and he insisted he knew nothing of this and after I called him out on everything he tried to back track. I have saved all the conversations and emails praying this guy is caught and goes to jail like others involved in this scam.
This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 11/14/2018 08:13 PM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/national-care-planning-council-bradley-austin/olive-branch-ms-38654/national-care-planning-council-bradley-austin-they-offered-me-a-job-and-it-was-a-scam-a-1467420. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content
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#1 Consumer Comment
It takes two...
AUTHOR: FloridaNative - (United States)
SUBMITTED: Thursday, November 15, 2018
I don't understand why you would get i-tunes cards and give the info to your "employer".
There is never any valid reason that a legitimate employer would require i-tunes payments from an employee. Never.
One way to stop the scamming is to not accept a bogus excuse to pay a stranger anything. That's what I mean by "it takes two". It takes the scammer and the person that suspends common sense in order for a scam to take place. I'm not excusing the scammer. I'm pointing out that his scam would have failed if you refused to buy those i-tunes cards and supply the numbers to him - no matter his reason. Next time someone asks you to buy any type of pre-paid card or to send money via any untraceable method - say no. It's a scam, no two ways about it.


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