Hello Mr. Gonzalez, sorry for the loud mowing noises around 15:00 minutes in your video. However, I did finish the mowing job we agreed upon and will await my payment of 120 million dollars. Thank you again for the opportunity. Please consider telling your YouTuber friends about my services.
Okay but the chicago guy responded EXACTLY the way you're supposed to. "Those are the allegations" is VERY important because if he had said anything else, he'd be admitting guilt. This was a (likely unannounced) interview at someones door way, not a court case. Fucking good on that guy for knowing what to do
So, the first story: Wendy’s almost certainly knew long before the $20k point. Corporations often intentionally wait to press charges in cases like this so they can 1) continue collecting evidence and 2) hit them for felony charges rather than a misdemeanor.
15:02 i honestly think it’s so funny when YouTubers apologize for loud background noises, because 9 times out of 10 I can’t hear a thing (or I have to listen really hard after they mention it lol)
love how they described the ups guy as "Chicago man" and then he's wearing a shirt that just says "Chicago" when they go see him
Scamming grandma: bad Scamming big company: less bad Scamming big company and kind of getting away with it: objectively funny
hey! someone who trained to be an anchor here,😅 most companies force u to say acronyms in full on first reference unless its a big government agency like the fbi or cia
Danny's eyes being one of the only blue toned things in the shot really makes him look like a Dune character
I have nothing but respect for anyone that figures out how to scam Google and Facebook out of $122 million dollars.
Fake employees are actually something we learn to look out for in financial audit. We test an organization’s employee rolls against other evidence to detect fraud
10:39 he actually did what he was charging them for, 'for services rendered, sending this bill' he was saying hey send me money for for sending you this bill
The thing with the Wendy's story is that, since it wasn't a franchise, corporate absolutely determines how many employee hours they are allowed to staff the store with based on projected sales for that day. Which is to say the ghost employee wasn't an EXTRA employee on the schedule, instead the manager was just understaffing the store by one fulltime employee while forcing her low level employee's to pick up the slack for being understaffed.
I've worked for a corporate office before and I can tell you it's incredibly easy to be paying bills that you wouldn't normally be paying, or that you shouldn't be paying. I spotted a bill that didn't seem to make sense - for some kind of cloud service. I'd never seen any mention of it in the year (by that point) that I'd worked at the office. I asked about it, and it was some kind of legacy cloud storage software that the company had bought a license (to be renewed yearly) for almost a decade prior. I checked with the IT team and the manager of them said "oh we stopped using that like five years ago..." So the company had been paying like two grand a year for something that no one knew about. The bill would come in and everyone just ASSUMED that it had been authorised.
Everyone always asks "Wire Fraud?" But no one ever asks "How are Fraud?" 😔
The Wendy’s lady scam probably led to that location being chronically understaffed with 1-2 people doing double the work while she profited off their effort.
It's very strange to me that the UPS address change was considered illegal. It's not as if the guy hacked them or something; as far as we know, he just told them to change the address and they did. That's like if I sent someone a message telling them to give me money for no reason, they gave me the money, then they tried to sue me for theft. There's no lies or fraud going on, just a very weird company infrastructure.
You know that money means absolutely nothing to you when you’re paying random bills without even reading them or looking into them
The Wendy's manager was definitely not the one doing the extra work, employees likely just had to cover for the "missing" worker
the fake parking attendants are very real. one got me and my sister with a fake receipt, then we got fined for not having a legit receipt, and were thankfully able to dispute it.
@Lucas-fl6py