Fake Escrow Scams: Protect High-Value Purchases
Fake escrow scams target buyers and sellers engaged in high-value transactions, typically involving vehicles, heavy equipment, or property. The scammer intercepts communications or creates fraudulent escrow websites that appear legitimate, convincing buyers that their funds are protected in a neutral account. In reality, there is no escrow service—the money goes directly to the scammer's account. The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center received 2,089 complaints related to escrow fraud in 2022, with average losses of $3,200 per victim. These scams exploit the legitimate practice of using third-party escrow services to protect both parties in high-stakes transactions, making them particularly effective for inexperienced online buyers and sellers. The typical timeline spans 1-2 weeks from initial contact to funds transfer. Scammers research active online listings on platforms like Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace, eBay Motors, or AutoTrader, then contact sellers pretending to be serious buyers. They propose using an escrow service to "protect both parties," which sounds legitimate to sellers unfamiliar with proper escrow procedures. The fake escrow website is professionally designed to mirror real services like Escrow.com or CBRE, complete with fake confirmation emails and authentication attempts that create a false sense of security. What makes fake escrow particularly insidious is that victims often lose money AND the merchandise. Sellers ship goods after receiving confirmation emails they believe came from the escrow service, only to discover the payment never cleared and the buyer was fabricated. For buyers, sending funds to a fake escrow account means the money vanishes entirely, and the seller may refuse to deliver goods pending payment verification.
常见手法
- • Intercepts or impersonates legitimate escrow services by creating nearly identical websites with slight domain name variations (escrow-secure.com vs escrow.com) and sending fake payment confirmation emails with official-looking branding.
- • Proposes escrow as a solution to sellers on classified platforms, positioning it as buyer protection while actually redirecting funds to fraudster-controlled accounts with official-sounding company names.
- • Creates urgency by claiming the buyer is "out of state" or "overseas" and needs expedited processing, requiring immediate wire transfers or cryptocurrency payments that cannot be reversed.
- • Uses stolen business credentials and fake business licenses to establish credibility, often posing as corporate procurement departments or fleet buyers making bulk purchases.
- • Requests bank wire transfers, ACH payments, or cryptocurrency instead of credit cards or payment platforms with fraud protection, knowing these methods are irreversible once sent.
- • Sends fake payment confirmation and release authorization emails that appear to come from a legitimate escrow service, tricking sellers into shipping merchandise before verifying actual payment receipt.
如何识别
- The buyer or seller insists on using a specific escrow service you've never heard of, or provides an escrow website link that looks slightly off (check the exact domain name carefully—scammers often use domains like 'escrow-secure.com' instead of 'escrow.com').
- The escrow service email address doesn't match the official domain (e.g., confirmation coming from 'info@gmail.com' while claiming to represent an established escrow company).
- The escrow service pressures you to wire funds immediately or use cryptocurrency, cryptocurrency, or wire transfers exclusively—legitimate escrow services offer multiple payment methods including credit cards.
- The counterparty claims to be from a corporation or offers to buy multiple items at once at full asking price without negotiation, especially if they've never viewed the item and are willing to pay shipping sight-unseen.
- The escrow website has poor design, broken links, typos, or doesn't have verifiable reviews on the Better Business Bureau or Google—legitimate escrow companies have established online presence and track records.
- Confirmation emails use generic greetings like 'Dear Customer' instead of your name, contain urgency language ('process today or offer expires'), or include phone numbers instead of directing you to log into a secure account.
如何保护自己
- Verify the escrow service independently by calling the company's official phone number (found on their official website, not from the email or link provided) and confirming that a transaction under your name actually exists.
- Use only established, verifiable escrow services with long histories like Escrow.com, PayPal's escrow feature, or services recommended by your state's real estate commission—avoid services suggested by the other party.
- Never wire money or use cryptocurrency for escrow payments; legitimate escrow services accept credit cards, bank transfers through established platforms, or cashier's checks that provide fraud protection.
- For high-value purchases, use credit cards or payment platforms (PayPal Goods & Services, eBay's payment system) that offer buyer protection and dispute resolution, rather than third-party escrow.
- Research the buyer or seller independently: verify their phone number through reverse lookup, check their online reviews across multiple platforms, and ask for references from previous transactions.
- Do not ship merchandise until funds have been verified in your actual bank account (not just an email confirmation)—contact your bank directly to confirm payment has cleared before releasing goods.
真实案例
A seller lists a 2019 Ford pickup truck on Craigslist for $28,000. A buyer from out of state contacts them immediately with full asking price offer and requests using an escrow service called 'SecureEscrow.net.' The seller receives a professional-looking confirmation email showing $28,000 in escrow, and ships the vehicle across the country. Two weeks later, the buyer's checks bounce and the bank confirms no wire transfer ever arrived—the seller has lost the truck and $28,000.
A business owner selling used construction equipment ($12,500 excavator) on Facebook Marketplace receives inquiry from a 'corporate fleet manager' wanting to purchase three units. They insist on using 'BizEscrow.com' for the transaction. The seller receives fake invoices and escrow releases, ships all three pieces of equipment, then discovers the escrow website was fraudulent and no payment was ever received.
A buyer arranges to purchase a used camera lens ($4,200) through an online forum. The seller suggests using escrow, and the buyer provides a link to 'EscrowProtect.org.' The buyer sends $4,200 via wire transfer to an account number provided by the fake escrow site. No merchandise is ever received, and when the buyer tries to contact the escrow company, the phone number goes to a voicemail that never returns calls.