English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Hi,
My teenage son has recently bought some stuff via internet and he entered our home address in the site.
But he doesn't have Credit card. He told me that he found an out of order credit card and exchanged 2 digits of that randomly and entered that number (the site didn't need any other information except Credit card number and expiration date) and it did work!!
I'm 100% sure that he doesn't lie about that.
I am wondering what consequences this may have?
May be the card owner is in a different country.
How can I give his/her Money back?

Thank you.

2007-09-21 22:01:08 · 8 answers · asked by young guy 2 in Business & Finance Credit

8 answers

Something phoney about all of this.
Ive looked through your other questions.
You have asked this same question 2-3 times.
In another question you say you are 23 and never had sex.
How can you have a son if you have never had sex and how could you have a teenage son at 23 regardless?

I think you are trying to get info on how to go about making up a fake or guessing a credit card number. Well it cant be done.

2007-09-21 22:14:45 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

If your son found a credit card and changed numbers well, I guess he got lucky. But you know it is illegal. I don't think you should let him do it again. You can get into trouble if they trace it back to you. If it were me, I would call the credit card company, anonymously and say that you FOUND a credit card and want to report it. Say it however you want , found it on the street, sidewalk, maybe in a dressing room of a department store... anything. At least tell them. And don't use it. They will cancel or trace the card to the owner & you will be the good semeritan.

2007-09-21 22:14:07 · answer #2 · answered by angels21405 2 · 0 0

Usually the name of the cardholder is required too. The only times when I didn't need that I had to at least enter the zip code for the billing address. I don't know what's going on in your son's case, but I've never heard of this happening. The 100% certainty you have I don't want to question. But on the other hand I don't see how it could be true.

2007-09-21 22:06:37 · answer #3 · answered by the Boss 7 · 0 0

hope he isnt old enough to be tried as a adult (I think that 15 is the age where he would be tried as a adult in credit card theft, as this is!!) the feds dont care about getting the money back to the person your son stole it from, all they care about is throughing him in prison for the next 3-5 years if I remember right

2007-09-21 22:07:19 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Honestly, you better hope your son doesn't get brought up on felony credit card fraud charges and you as well since you knew about it.

You need to immediatly contact the company and explain the situation to them.

2007-09-25 04:36:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you got to find the company he ordered from and find out and explain. if it is credit card fraud it can be likely traced and if he is underage, you will likely be held responsible. it's called credit card fraud and most likely holds a felony charge, track it now and i suggest getting some keylogging and tracer appls so you can trace your son's site usage.

2007-09-21 22:06:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The best way is to call the company and cancel the order.

2007-09-21 22:07:27 · answer #7 · answered by Karla 2 · 0 0

Wait until the end of the month to see if you receive anything through the post.

2007-09-21 22:06:10 · answer #8 · answered by dot&carryone. 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers