Firstly you will not get any money because your travellers check is fake
secondly you will be handed over to the police for performing an act of forgery
thirdly you will be jailed by the police for committing an act of forgery
Sure, you can. A student ID which is signed & laminated with the seal of your school/college is sufficient identity proof to cash a cheque. However, if the ID is just plain card with no college/school seal and no lamination, it is possible that the bank may not accept it because it is easy to fake such simple cards.
A crossed check or an Account Payee check is one that cannot be exchanged for cash. It has to be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom the check is issued. For ex: if you lose a regular check written out to you by a friend and I find it, I can create a fake ID card and visit the bank as you and get it cashed. However, if it is a crossed check, the only way I can cash it is by depositing the check in my bank account. This way chances of misuse are reduced greatly
If you cash a check from a scammer, you may end up losing money because the check could be fake or stolen. This can result in financial loss, legal trouble, and damage to your credit score. It's important to be cautious and verify the legitimacy of any checks you receive before cashing them.
if you deposit a fake cash in a atm is depend on a bank security and the currency that you are depositing two thing will happens 1 is the atm accept your note as a real note or just recognize the note and spit it out or stop the transection and alert in that time police will arrive for investigation
Oh, that's a happy little question! When a cheque is returned with the reason "not signed in accordance with mandate," it simply means that the signature on the cheque doesn't match the authorized signature on file. It's like painting a tree with the wrong shade of green - we just need to make sure everything lines up properly for it to be accepted. Just take a deep breath, make the necessary adjustments, and try again - there are no mistakes, just happy little accidents!
I would think you would find out when you go to cash it. If it's fake chances are, you won't see any of the money.
it is not fake. i am sure as i have got a cheque from paisalive.
Sure, you can. A student ID which is signed & laminated with the seal of your school/college is sufficient identity proof to cash a cheque. However, if the ID is just plain card with no college/school seal and no lamination, it is possible that the bank may not accept it because it is easy to fake such simple cards.
A crossed check or an Account Payee check is one that cannot be exchanged for cash. It has to be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom the check is issued. For ex: if you lose a regular check written out to you by a friend and I find it, I can create a fake ID card and visit the bank as you and get it cashed. However, if it is a crossed check, the only way I can cash it is by depositing the check in my bank account. This way chances of misuse are reduced greatly
Cash flow business scams come and go, from pyramid ponzi schemes to fake retirement funds. The most recent scams seem to be from fake Cash 4 Gold companies.
There isn't one its all fake
Keep the bank is good for saving money until you need it and if someone was to steal from you, you would have money in the bank! That person owes you an explanation of why did they scam you, and now they owe you cash, and you have proof by showing the fake check and reporting what the person did.
By carving fake ancient Roman statues for cash.
A crossed check or an Account Payee check is one that cannot be exchanged for cash. It has to be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom the check is issued. For ex: if you lose a regular check written out to you by a friend and I find it, I can create a fake ID card and visit the bank as you and get it cashed. However, if it is a crossed check, the only way I can cash it is by depositing the check in my bank account. This way chances of misuse are reduced greatly
They are all scams, they are amongst the sliskect scams on the internet.Don't fall for the one were they send you a cheque and you're supposed to bank it and wire some of the money to them. This is done under the guise that you are mystery shopping at the bank. The cheque will eventually bounce when the bank realise it's a fake, this can take up to 4 weeks and always leaves you in a heap of debt.You withdraw money from the cheque before it has gone through the clearance process and send it to the scammer, when the cheque bounces it obviously leaves you with an overdrawn balance, but the scammer has netted real money.The fake cheques look so real that even the authorities couldn't tell they were fake when presented with them.There is probably other scamming methods on those websites too, steer clear of them.You have been warned, dear.
you not goin to gite in
they'll brake