Tuesday, March 15, 2022

They want me so bad. Well, their gonna have to wait, forever.

 


When we moved to Baltimore, we had to get a landline phone.  There were a variety of reasons, but it boiled down to two things.  First, the husband is on call 24/7 for work, so we have to have a guaranteed way for his coworkers to reach him.  The second reason is that we have owned two large houses, and Cookie refuses to become one of the people who carry their cell phones 24/7.   The cell phone only is in use when I leave the house for a period of time, or travel, period.  

As a result, we get all manner of whack-a-doodle robocalls all day long.  You learn to live with that. 

I also get a lot of odd calls from our old area code, which is where the cell phones have their numbers based, based in Central Ohio.  One caller, "Bob" from the "electronic company" that and that he was "coming to turn our power off in your Columbus abode unless you give me your credit card number NOW and pay the $3,000 balance this very minute."  I laughed.  "Thees is not humorous," said "Bob".  I told him I had a thick juicy steak to eat, and that he was free to knock his socks off while trying to cut my "electronic".

We don't get many spammy text messages because we don't give out our cell phone numbers. But this morning, which making coffee,  I got a very odd text message through the cell phone from a dealer who bills themselves as Ford Superstore.  And Son of a Tallahassee Bitch, the dealership is for real.  How about that?

"Mr. COOKIE COOKIE" it begins...
"We have buyers for your used Ford F-150..."

This gave me pause for a number of reasons.   First, they had my full name. Which I found odd.  Secondly, they had my full name with my correct cell phone number. Thirdly, I don't own a F-150. 

So I called said dealership and said: "Why am I getting these from you when I have no business relationship with you?"

The operator said she would connect me to the right person. 

Eventually, Mr. Right Person picked up and said "Mr. Cookie - Yes, we would like you to bring in your truck and give you a premium on your trade-in amount."

So she put me on hold and transferred the call to the person who was up next to be the Right Person. 

This guy explained that this was part of a batch broadcast fax (which I call SPAM) from customer profiles drawn from their service department.  "You brought your Ford F-150 in last fall to have the tires rotated. It had Ohio plates."

"Now that intrigues me," says I.  And then I explain to him why:

1) I do not own a currently own a Ford.

2) I haven't owned a Ford since 1982 when I junked a 1973 Ford LTD that the engine seized up on leaving me stranded at college.

2) I do not now own, lease, rent, or drive a Ford F-150 pick-up, now or ever. (I know who I am, and someone living in a big city has no need for such. Or for a fragile self-esteem reason that many men buy such trucks.) 

3) I have never considered owning such a vehicle.

4) Until today, I had never heard of this Florida town where said dealership is located.   And If I have never heard of it, it isn't possible for me to have been there last fall when we were in Baltimore - ALL FALL WITH NO TRAVEL because of COVID.

5) I would never take any vehicle to a dealership out of warranty and based on their text message said truck was way out of any new car warranty, for a tire rotation.

6) I haven't set foot in Florida since 2011 and have no intention of doing so in the future.

And finally: I haven't lived in Ohio for a decade. 

"So if  I have never been in the corner of the state where you are, or heard of the city where you are, or own the vehicle that I have never owned, leased, or driven, and thus I cannot rotate its tires, how did my name, and phone number get into your dealer's service logs on a vehicle that as far as I am concerned doesn't exist?"

Dead silence. 

Now, he did promise to take me out of their rotation of broadcast (SPAMMY) messages. 

Either this dealership has had a customer that used my name, my cell phone number, and someone else's VIN in their system. You'd think that would get kicked out, don't you? Or the person at the dealership made some fantastical (as in "I call bullshit") story up. 

Then the coup d' grace. I asked what number he had just taken out of the system.  He says "Well, the one you are calling from," and he rattles off my landline in Baltimore.  

"Guess again, son."

Now, I am not saying that this dealership isn't above board and all, but something here ain't right.  And had he just come out and said "Sir, I do not have any idea how this happened," it would be a closed book. 

But this story about me being someplace I was not, doing something that I did not do, and driving something I wouldn't drive, now that gets to me. 

And I will get to the bottom of it.  Because my question is, have other people fallen for this?  Or who in their right mind would want to be me.  (I should add that Life Lock hasn't ever sent me a warning that someone was trying to be me.)

But one thing is for sure, I'll never buy a car from them, new, used, leased, or otherwise made up.


10 comments:

  1. We do the same with landlines and cell phones, and get all kinds of wacky calls on the landline. I loved how you took "Bob" to task.

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    1. I love the ones that call from IRS who demand that I pay some obscene amount of money or they will have the FBI come after me. My response is always "And what make you think that, little man needle prick?"

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  2. I still assume it is a phishing expedition. Yet I suppose one can't rule out identity theft. ....and were you EVER really going to buy a Ford anyways?

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    1. The husband owns one, but not an F-150, and he was not in Florida last fall either.

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    2. Me? There is no Ford in my Future.

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  3. We no longer have a landline, but fortunately our provider will identify non-contact numbers as "Spam Likely" and we just reject the call. I also never answer a number I don't recognize, that's what voicemail is for. I do like your style, sweetpea! Bravo! xox

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  4. Junk callers are vile creatures. They buy contact details (if ever you've given these to any online store or service, or indeed even registered to vote) - regardless of whether you are aware of it or not - and then make up crap stories to seem believable. I still get crap junk emails purported to be from people who used to be in my contact list way back when MSN Messenger was still a "thing" - and that was killed-off in 2013.

    Well done you, for giving them back the ire as they deserve! jx

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    1. And then did I mention that I filed a complaint with the FTC?

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  5. Maybe this is just a lonely person who is good at doing various voices and wants to talk to people like yourself? In any event... is this worth the time? I mean, I am fascinated - I read the whole post and think the whole world of spamming is a complete mystery pool - so, if you feel the need to expose - play on, dear. More power to you. Keep us informed. Kizzes.

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    1. If this were a run of a mill "Welcome to Hilton! Please hold while we connect you to one of our agents" calls where no one ever picks up and they bombard you advertisements for every that is not Hilton. "Nail Fungus? We're making a special offer to Hilton guests, like you..." Yeah, those call I have no time for.
      I mean before I spoke to the dealer and heard that cock and bull story about being in their service database, it was just an annoying message thing. But when you tell me that I am your customer? oh, no. That ratchets up ratchet old me.

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