Consumers warned about telemarketing vacation scam - Action News
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Consumers warned about telemarketing vacation scam

The Better Business Bureau is warning consumers about a telemarketing scam in which operators use the names of Canadian businesses to obtain credit card information for cheap vacations.

Fake vacation scam

12 years ago
Duration 2:23
Scammers are using the promise of cheap vacations to get B.C. credit card information

The Better Business Bureau is warning consumers about a telemarketing scam involving operators who use the names of Canadian businesses to obtain credit card information for cheap vacations.

The calls claim to come fromKarisma Hotelsand Resorts in Mexico, andoffer a six-day stay for four people for a total of $999 US. But when contacted by CBC News, Karisma Hotels and Resorts saidtheydon't engage in any telephone marketing. The operators alsosometimes say the deal is for WestJet or Air Miles customers.

"All the resorts arefive stars or greater. We're working in conjunction with some of the Canadian airlines," said a telemarketer who called the CBC Vancouver newsroom on Saturday.

After a lengthy sales pitch, the operators inevitably end up asking for a credit card number.

"They will give you a six-digit approval code and this is what I tell all my customers to do: Be a wise consumer, and look at the back of your credit card. You're gonna see that 1-800 number for your credit card company. Please call them up, give them the six-digit approval code," the caller said.

"If I was to do you any harm, the last thing I would tell you to do is to call your credit card company. But I want you to do it because it will give you an instant peace of mind."

When a CBC News reporter expressed uncertainty at the price, the operator then tried to discount the packagefirst to $699, and finally offering to hold the deal for a $99 down payment.

'A very, very old scam'

WestJet says consumers in southern Ontario, the Metro Vancouver area and Alberta are being targeted.

"This is a very, very old scam. Its a variation on a theme thats been around for many years," said WestJet spokesman Robert Palmer.

"The scammers... are essentially professional con artists trying to part you with your credit card information ... in the promise of a vacation package, which of course doesnt exist."

Palmer says WestJet does not share the private information ofits customers, and does not engage in any telemarketing.

"Weve attempted to pursue these individuals and find out who they are, but unfortunately its a very sophisticated operation," he said.

"They use computer programs to generate randomly the numbers they call ... The same software scrambles and reroutes the phone number that theyre actually calling from so its almost impossible to trace the call."

Palmer says his best advice to consumers is to simply hang up.

"Were really at the mercy of these con artists because its impossible to find out who they are, where they are," he said.

"The best thing that we can do is shine the light on them in the hope that they scurry back to the holes they came from."

'Who doesn't want to win a free trip?'

Mark Fernandes withtheBetter Business Bureau advises customers not to give out credit card information to strangers on the telephone.

"The credit card number, if you give it over to a scammer, one of two things can happen: the scammer will turn it around really quickly, make some large online purchases or maybe go to retailers on a fabricated credit card with your number," he said.

"Or the other thing is that it just gets compiled into a list with other credit card numbers that are sold through organized crime."

Fernandes says scams like this one are extremely common.

The telemarketers claim to be from a five-star resort in Mexico's Cancun region. (Israel Lea/Associated Press)

"People want to go on vacation right now, and who doesnt want to win a free trip?" he said.

"Scammers know that this is something they can capitalize on and that people may be likely to give out their credit card information if they think they can get a free trip."

Fernandes advisespeople who think theymight be victims of a scam to report it to their credit card company right away.