Money mules in the United States are how scammers launder their money. I sent an Apple AirTag to one of these mules in order to show you how the process works!

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24 thoughts on “I Mailed an AirTag to a Scammer!”
  1. A whole network of people need to start doing this. Eventually, a scammer will get caught trying to pass fake bills….can even go as far as notifying law enforcement in the scammers town

  2. Why MOST of the scammers are from India???.. I guess because India is so corrupted that is their daily basis. Indian being Indians… they stab each other's back just to survive.. I meet a fellow colleague from India, good fellow, and he told me, Everything in India has a "extra" fee ( corruption plain and simple ) , government paperwork, services, etc etc.. so it is in their DNA to scam people

  3. I got a scam letter (email) saying I paid money from my PayPal account to purchase BTC for myself. It was a congratulation letter but had a phone number to call if I had questions. My PayPal account had no such transaction so I relaxed but there was no provision to let PayPal know this — I thought it would be useful to PayPal. So that's where it ended.

  4. I’m all for the spirit here, but no matter how illegal the purpose, you knew the bills were fake and tried to pass them as real.
    This is literally counterfeiting, not that USSS has anyone competent left, but seriously that’s playing with fire.

  5. good for me all scammers send me english messages but i'm french in Québec and all amazone are paypal ect ect send me french messages 😉

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