If you put the 9.60 in the drawer that transaction ended once you gave him the 91 dollars. He Gives you a 50 and three 20's that's $110, and you gave them a hundred dollar bill plus $10 you gave him the same amount of money back that he gave you. To me it sounds like everything is kosher.
I moved from Las Vegas DMV (4-6 hours) to Deadwood, South Dakota DMV (4-6 minutes) [emoji12][emoji239][emoji12][emoji239][emoji12][emoji239]
So far so good. I hope you won't take offence but I'd like to see a few more people say the same thing, such is the degree of my self doubt
That's how I see it and the way I described it in my initial post is exactly the chain of events.
I fully believe he was a con man and he was gonna try something. But I thought in the first instance he might try to insinuate I shortchanged him on the cigarette transaction with the ol' up the sleeve trick. I made sure he couldn't do that and that he knew that I knew exactly what I'd given him.
In the second instance I thought he would try to give me less than 110 and still expect me to give him 110, thereby still insinuating that I had left him short....but he didn't. He gave me the full 110. I gave him 110 back. There were no inbetween bits where he'd get me to swap one set of notes, take that off me, hand (some of) it straight back with another bunch of notes etc etc
There was the cigarette transaction then straight to the 110. No other money was exchanged in between.
Am I missing exactly where the con is? Or is this an instance of a con-man backing out (but still wanting his 100note back so he could try the same con in some other shop)
Vegas DMV is the worst I've ever experienced. You have to take the day off work because there is no telling how long it will take. I moved to Oklahoma and went in to get my license renewed the other day and it took 5 minutes.
Could very well be. Why give you a $100 for the cigs when he had a $20?
Maybe he was trying the con then screwed up, or just testing the waters. Keep your eye out for him again.
A-dev you bugger, do you know how many times I tried to make 110 not equal 110 after reading your initial post at the end of an all-nighter watching the football?
It sucks having to forever be alert to scammers. I used to count back big amounts out loud so customers knew exactly where I'd started and exactly where it ended up. And because I'm not very good at maths.
I am still shocked that ****ing smokes cost 9.50 a pack thats a ridiculous expensive habit for people. I would just smoke crack probably cheaper.
This is the power these pricks have, to make you have doubt in an otherwise simple situation. For hours later I couldn't help thinking 'he must have done something there, I'm eventually gonna realise it and feel like a complete ****ing idiot'.
I don't ****ing believe this. On a day that I wouldn't ordinarily be working I think I have fallen prey to the exact same con (the quick change) that I foiled a few weeks ago - I beat it a few weeks ago because I knew it was a con in progress and called for help, not really letting it getting anywhere. This time I was pretty sure it was the same con again but I thought I was on top of it, I thought I understood it and would know exactly where he was trying to **** me. I may have been wrong about that.
Here it goes.
Customer is buying a packet of cigarettes that cost 9.60.
He gives me a 100 note plus 60cents.
This gives him 91.00 change which I know I give him correctly and I'm quite sure he would have known that I was sure of the change I gave him.
There were no interruptions during this transaction. Done.
Then predictably the other notes start coming out of the pocket.
He gives me a 50 and three 20s to get 110 back (including his original 100 note)
^this was, as far as I was concerned, a new transaction in which any customer might come in with a bunch of different notes asking to consolidate them into fewer larger notes. He gave me 110 (genuine notes) - I gave him 110. Seems straightforward. And yet as soon as he left I got that sinking feeling.
How much have I been screwed out of here? Maybe its the stress but I can't figure it out.
Having a broken air conditioner in 100+ degree weather.
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