Fraser police investigate claims of fraud by a psychic.
32-year-old woman says she paid, but spell remains!
http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/n...z/-/index.html
Sorry, I couldn't resist :D
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Fraser police investigate claims of fraud by a psychic.
32-year-old woman says she paid, but spell remains!
http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/n...z/-/index.html
Sorry, I couldn't resist :D
If I were the defense attorney, I would personally argue that the spell was broken. The victim has to prove that it wasn't....
Well since we're on the subject of fraud... here's a good piece of advice against credit or debit card fraud....
When you use either card... make sure that you hide your hand over it whenever possible. With the explosion of cell phones with cameras... would be fraudsters are taking pics of the cards of people who's card may be in plain view. With that information they have the card number, name and the expiration date.
Think your Debit card is safe because you need a PIN number.... think again... some places don't require a pin.... but that may be with machine use only where the card is actually required. But with credit cards, the scam is starting to become much more prevalent problem.
Larceny by trick? Either the plaintiff thought she was under a spell and thought the psychic could break the spell or she didn't.
Anyways this is totally amateur hour. A good psychic starts out charging under $50, then slowly raises the price to get as much money out of their customers as possible. It's the whole boiling a frog by slowly turning up the heat thing.