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AR15.COM
12/31/2004 5:09:43 AM EDT
I just heard about the scam where the perps stuck their own UPCs on merchandise.  The reason it is so funny, is my brother and I notified SAMs manager/asset protection of this a few years ago and how it could easily be done!  And even bettter you could do the Box 1/2 and 2/2, etc stickers to get more out of the store!
12/31/2004 5:22:41 AM EDT
[#1]

Quoted:
I just heard about the scam where the perps stuck their own UPCs on merchandise.  The reason it is so funny, is my brother and I notified SAMs manager/asset protection of this a few years ago and how it could easily be done!  And even bettter you could do the Box 1/2 and 2/2, etc stickers to get more out of the store!



Yeah, I am stil laughing my ass off! Wouldn't surprise me if it was that manager that scammed them.... or maybe that's what led to them looking out for it, which is how they caught it... who knows?
12/31/2004 5:27:04 AM EDT
[#2]
and when they go for RFid....that will be simple to scam too, but not easy for most people
12/31/2004 5:35:33 AM EDT
[#3]
When I was in retail, we had a hard enough time getting our own APC's scanned.  Far as I know, UPCs are maintained at the IT department, who sets the prices, etc, and, the scan system works through there.  If an unknown UPC would come up, our scanners wouldn't read them, and, we went off the price tag.

This kinda sounds like
how
12/31/2004 5:42:48 AM EDT
[#4]
But why are you assuming it would be an UNKNOWN UPC?

Ummm...buy an item from the targeted store, copy the UPC... print your own stickers, place them on boxes or merchandise that you want, pretty simple and very plausible


example:  go to WM and buy a cheap TV and copy the UPC and return the item
print stickers and go back to WM and buy expensive TV and stick your new UPC on there
To make it more believeable, stick with the same brand, etc.


ETA:  With that kind of attitude, it is no wonder why this type of fraud is so easy to perpetrate.
12/31/2004 5:54:11 AM EDT
[#5]
I had a buddy a long time ago take a UPC sticker off a $40 wood baseball bat and place it on a $240 Corbon Core Alumium bat . He took it up to the register of the sports store, and the chick at the counter had no idea that he had swapped the stickers. She let him walk out the shop with a $240 baseball bat for $40. I couldn't believe it... I thought for sure his ass was going to get caught.

This is the perfect example of why women should not be allowed to work in a sports shop.
12/31/2004 5:58:42 AM EDT
[#6]

Quoted:
I had a buddy a long time ago take a UPC sticker off a $40 wood baseball bat and place it on a $240 Corbon Core Alumium bat . He took it up to the register of the sports store, and the chick at the counter had no idea that he had swapped the stickers. She let him walk out the shop with a $240 baseball bat for $40. I couldn't believe it... I thought for sure his ass was going to get caught.

This is the perfect example of why women should not be allowed to work in a sports shop.



And a perfect example of why you should get rid of this guy as a friend...
12/31/2004 6:02:54 AM EDT
[#7]

Quoted:

Quoted:
I had a buddy a long time ago take a UPC sticker off a $40 wood baseball bat and place it on a $240 Corbon Core Alumium bat . He took it up to the register of the sports store, and the chick at the counter had no idea that he had swapped the stickers. She let him walk out the shop with a $240 baseball bat for $40. I couldn't believe it... I thought for sure his ass was going to get caught.

This is the perfect example of why women should not be allowed to work in a sports shop.



And a perfect example of why you should get rid of this guy as a friend...


+1
12/31/2004 7:27:26 AM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:
When I was in retail, we had a hard enough time getting our own APC's scanned.  Far as I know, UPCs are maintained at the IT department, who sets the prices, etc, and, the scan system works through there.  If an unknown UPC would come up, our scanners wouldn't read them, and, we went off the price tag.

This kinda sounds like


To me.  No saying definitly, I just dont' see how it could be done, unless it was a high level managment scam, as opposed to some knuckleheads printing off UPCs on Avery labels.



Umm... take a lower priced product, say a $50 TV, take its UPC and place it on a more expensive TV.... Duh....


Edited to add: mikejohnson-- we must be twins or something-- I didn't even read your post before posting this....
12/31/2004 7:29:46 AM EDT
[#9]

Quoted:
This kinda sounds like





This was one of the RSS stories on SlashDot this morning.


$1.5 Million Bar-code Scheme Bilks Wal-Mart Stores

Two Tenn. Couples Charged in $1.5 Million Scheme Aimed at Wal-Mart Stores
By Colin Fly
Associated Press Writer


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Two couples have been charged in a price-switching scheme that allegedly defrauded Wal-Mart stores in 19 states of $1.5 million over the last decade.
Authorities said the scheme involved using a home computer to produce UPC bar codes for cheaper products and slipping them over the real codes on high-priced items. The suspects then allegedly sold the merchandise, or returned it for refunds or store gift cards that also were sold.

The Uniform Product Code identifier brings up a product's name and price on a store cashier's screen.

Authorities said they're still calculating the total stolen from Wal-Mart and two other unidentified retail chains by the four suspects and up to 30 accomplices.

"They were ranging all over the country," Sumner County District Attorney Ray Whitley said.

Arrested Tuesday on charges of theft of more than $60,000 were sisters Julie Marie Simmons, 35, and Laura Simmons Howerton, 39, and their husbands Michael Poore, 29, and Dewey Howerton, 39. The four share a house in the Nashville suburb of Portland.

The ring avoided detection in part by visiting stores at the busiest times, Portland Police Detective Don Hardin said.

Hardin, who declined to name the other chains at the companies' request, said other arrests could come as soon as next week.

Authorities began making their case in January after investigators in neighboring Macon County found about $10,000 in stolen Wal-Mart merchandise and an informant who led them to the two couples.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. spokeswoman Sharon Weber declined to comment on the specifics of the case, but said the company has been active in the investigation.

Authorities say they believe the ring struck Wal-Marts in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia.

The four were in jail Thursday awaiting a Jan. 5 court hearing. They face from eight to 20 years if convicted on the theft charges. More charges are pending, authorities said.

Jail officials said the suspects do not yet have a lawyer.

AP-ES-12-30-04 1844EST



ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGB6085LD3E.html

12/31/2004 7:33:42 AM EDT
[#10]
looks like they hit other retail locations as well, not just Wally World... it was just a matter of time. Now they will have to come up with a new way to "authenticate" UPC codes... kinda how we keep changing money to prevent counterfeiting, and how Microsoft has those cool license tags for their software... prices will definately rise.
12/31/2004 7:34:15 AM EDT
[#11]
looks like they hit other retail locations as well, not just Wally World... it was just a matter of time. Now they will have to come up with a new way to "authenticate" UPC codes... kinda how we keep changing money to prevent counterfeiting, and how Microsoft has those cool license tags for their software... prices will definately rise.
12/31/2004 7:47:33 AM EDT
[#12]
The only way the scam works is from un atentive cashiers.  When an item is scanned it shows a decription on the screen.  Yes this does and can work.  But theft is theft.

SGatr15
12/31/2004 11:13:27 AM EDT
[#13]

Quoted:
The only way the scam works is from un atentive cashiers.  When an item is scanned it shows a decription on the screen.  Yes this does and can work.  But theft is theft.

SGatr15




+1


A few months ago I was in the check-out line behind another guy. The cashier scanned the tool set that he had and it came up around $20. The thing was, the tools he was buying were worth waaay more than $20. The cashier did a double-take, said "WTF", and called Hardware for the correct price.