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Man loses all his stuff in Craigslist hoax

Daylight robbery
Tuesday, 25 March 2008, 15:09

A MAN WAS stripped of almost all his worldly possessions on Saturday after a hoaxer impersonating him posted two adverts on Craigslist claiming that he had had to suddenly leave town and that people should help themselves to his stuff.

Independent contractor, Robert Salisbury, from Oregon had been away from his home Saturday afternoon when he received a phone call from a woman who had gone to his house to claim his horse. The woman had seen a Craigslist posting saying that the animal had been abandoned by its owner and, as an animal lover, felt compelled to go and pick it up. But when she arrived, she realised that the horse was in excellent condition and looked in no way abandoned, prompting her to call Salisbury.

According to the Seattle Times, Salisbury immediately rushed home, stopping along the way to plead with someone driving away with a lorry load of his things, including his work ladders, a lawn mower and a weed eater, to please give them back. The driver refused and angrily waved a printout of the craigslist advert at him in justification. The closer he got to home, the more cars he spotted skipping the scene packed with his possessions.

At home he found about 30 people scavenging through what was left of his barn equipment and porch furniture, none of them taking any heed of Salisbury’s protests to lay off. "They honestly thought that because it appeared on the Internet it was true," he blubbed.

Salisbury called the Jackson County sheriff's office, but by the time they had arrived, the pillagers had fled the scene. Jackson County Sgt. Colin Fagan, appealed to anyone who had taken Salisbury’s stuff to please give it back or face prosecution. The police are talking to Craigslist lawyers to try and track down the person in charge of the ad. µ

L'Inq
Seattle Times

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Comments
shouldnt be hard to find the person

im sure that once craigslist gets a hold of the ISP with the IP used to make the posting and then the police cross reference the address with the list of customers the guy has/had, it will zero in on who did it.

still.. all those who showed up and partook should seriously be held accountable as well. but im afraid for him thats gonna be a bit of a lost cause.

posted by : shawn, 25 March 2008 Complain about this comment
WOW....

Amazing, both on the cleverness of the hoaxer and the parasites who went there and vultured his items.

SHAME ON THEM, leeches.





posted by : Bob Marl, 27 December 2007 Complain about this comment
Proxy

What makes you think the advertiser is clueless or will be easy to catch. It could have been his own wife using a proxy and they could never find out, depending on the proxy.

posted by : Proxy, 25 March 2008 Complain about this comment
Wow, people are amazing

The very idea that a post on the net says "come to this address and take all you want" and people just do it. It's one thing if the stuff is on the side of the curb, but a whole different store to walk into private dwellings (ex: a barn) and take stuff out is theft, even if they were invited.

I'd say he should press charges against anybody and everybody, it may be a loosing battle, but as the quote goes "ignorance to the lawsuit isn't as escuse".

posted by : TravisO, 27 December 2007 Complain about this comment
Never fear, RIAA is here!

This should be easy, all we have to do is ask the RIAA to find the imposter. They find illegal downloaders all day every day. Then we could see just how much more tech savvy they are then us!

But then again, they might be too busy looking for real criminals like five year olds and Seventy year old grandmothers. Nevermind, they shouldn't be buggered on such a trivial task. We'll just leave it for the local police, I'm sure their cyber-crime unit is top notch!

posted by : Andrew, 24 California, 26 March 2008 Complain about this comment
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