Termyn8or
Posts: 18681
Joined: 11/12/2005 Status: offline
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It's uttering and it is an offense. However many people do not know something, a check can be written on anything, even toilet paper. If you include the account number and a valid signature, the words "Pay to the order of" and the amount written out and the date, it is a legal instrument. All the thieves did by printing their checks is to lower the suspicion level a bit, and possibly gain another charge against them. Counterfeiting. They are already guilty of forgery so, so what ? Actually I don't think it is called counterfeiting, but there is something against it in the law. Like making your own driver's license and things like that. It is not currency, but it is a fake legal document. So if you are running low an checks, it is perfectly legal for you to scan a blank check, rub out the number of the check, I suggest you use a number up in the 10 thousands or something to avoid a clash with checks you would probably be ordering, and simply write it. That is as long as you are legally entitled to do so, meaning that it is your account. Also be on the lookout for more similar scams. Now that banks are reluctant to send cancelled checks back to the issuer, we will probably see more of this as it is slightly harder to get caught. And in the end who benefits ? When you've been ripped off and your checks bounce, they charge all kinds of fees. They do nothing that is not in their own best interest. T Addendum, one time an ex-employer tried giving me a paycheck written on scrap paper, said it was perfectly good. They were messing with me because the account number was not on it. Otherwise I could have taken it. On another note I got a buddy who was literally ripped off for millions, by his lawyer. The lawyer is in jail by now, but he didn't get the money back. So let that be a lesson, nothing is 100% safe anywhere. And remember the FDIC and FSLIC limit of $100,000 is per depositor, not per account. They may have raised the limit to $250,000, but the same limitation still applies. Safety is an illusion. T
< Message edited by Termyn8or -- 12/16/2008 8:04:57 AM >
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