Who are Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com?
Luxurious French Bulldogs Farm – French bulldogs for sale Luxurious French Bulldogs Farm – French bulldogs for sale, http://Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com, www.Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com Email used: [email protected] Phone number used: NOT KNOWN, Please add to comments below Names used: NOT KNOWN, Please add to comments below Physical address used*: NOT KNOWN, Please add to comments below *Scammers use a physical address to appear more legitimate. The address will have no connection to the actual scam as they will be an innocent third party Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com are advertising puppys for sale online. They use stolen credit cards and invent identities to defraud people shopping for a french bulldog puppy online. In the first email, the scammer will ask all the right questions, putting you through the motions to prove your suitability: how would we care for our puppy, how would we train him, how often would he be alone? Then the fraudsters emails will get shorter and normally keep to sms messages. This is because the first email is a template where as you are now dealing with the actual scammer. The “breeder” will ignore any questions about their affiliation with any clubs or organisations, and questions about the puppy’s parents. The main focus now is convincing you to pay as soon as possible. The puppy will be shipped to you by the scammers perferred delivery company. There is no other option. If you insist on picking up your new french bulldog they will eventually agree. It makes no difference to them if you travel for 4 hours because they are not at the address they claim to be. Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com will claim to deliver the puppy using a Fraudulent Delivery company which is actually another scam website they set up in order to steal your money by charging for non existent delivery, a air conditioned travel crate, medical insurance for your puppy as well as multiple other fees. To see more scam websites involving french bulldog puppys have a look at French Bulldog Puppy Scams.ScreenShot
This screenshot was taken on November 27, 2021
Click to view WebsiteWho registered Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com?
Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com was registered on November 14, 2021 with NAMECHEAP INC . It was registered using the following details:
Name: | Not recorded ([email protected]) |
Address: | Kalkofnsvegur 2, Reykjavik, 101, IS |
How can I shut down down a website?
Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com was registered with the domain registrar NAMECHEAP INC. NAMECHEAP INC have an email especially for domains that break their terms and conditions. Setting up a website with the sole intention of stealing money is definitely against NAMECHEAP INCs Terms and Conditions! To send an abuse report to NAMECHEAP INC please click the red button below and complete the email to help shut down Luxuriousfrenchbulldogfarm.com! File an Abuse ReportIf you have any further information please post it in the comments section below. We are particularly interested in names, email address and phone numbers used by these scammers.
I looked at this website in early December and sent an email about a specific dog. The response was as mentioned “how do you intend to care for a French Bulldog. I responded and asked about the purchase process moving forward, no reply. I sent a second email thinking maybe they closed for Christmas and requested someone call me, again no reply. Initially it didn’t seem odd that there was no phone # because my wife had been looking at shelters or breeders and it wasn’t uncommon not to see a listed phone #, most wanted an application completed prior to contact. I remember seeing something about a scam when I first started looking for French Bulldogs but didn’t look at it, last night I looked at the “Luxurious” website and thought it odd that the same dogs were showing that I looked at a month ago. At $1,485 which is way below the going price for Frenchies, I wouldn’t expect to see the same dogs listed. Then I found PetScams.com and learned about the scam and how it works. I’m glad I didn’t lose any money, I guess I should have remembered “If it seems to good to be true, it probably is too good to be true”.