What the scammer wanted to steal was not the driveway; they wanted to steal the contractor (driveway replacement worker)'s money. They pretend to be the owner looking for a driveway replacement, "accidentally" pay too much, ask for the surplus money back, and then do a chargeback on everything they paid. In this case the contractor went ahead before realizing they've been scammed. Experienced contractors ask for an in-person meeting or proof of ownership.
As for the contractor who did the digging, few solid leads have emerged. When deputies called the scammer and asked him for the contractor’s phone number, he helpfully provided one – that belonged to the Orlando International Airport.
The angle that leaps to mind is some property flipper saw the place listed and hired some shady workmen to tear the driveway out knowing it would fuck up any pending contracts, and he's hoping the owner will be desperate enough to take whatever lowball offer he swoops in with.
But that seems like a pretty risky scheme, unless he's also planning on not paying whoever he hired to bulldoze the driveway. And I guess before you get the driveway replaced you ought to make double damn sure you're not hiring the same motherfucker who ripped it out.
You're correct in that there's no way you're going to be able to haul away a concrete slab that big and keep it in one piece to be reused elsewhere. And even then, for what? You have an application that needs a slab the exact size and shape of this lady's driveway?
Another option, she's buying a new house down the road, and selling this one to pay for it.
If the person who did this wanted the other house but lost out on the bid, this is a fairly low-cost way of fucking up that deal. And if the deal still goes through, then it's just a costly act of petty revenge.
concrete can be crushed and reused as part of the agregate mix, which is probably exactly what happened to it. waste not want not, right?
In any case, if it wasn't a scumbag flipper, then it was probably the contractors using the pressure of the listing to force her to accept the first not-actually-low-ball offer that comes along. (and then all the sundry other bullshit contractors pull to inflate the price of the job)
Sanchez is helping Brochu sell her home. She posted about the situation online and believes Brochu is the victim of a scam.
But neither woman knows what the scam is.
it's simple.
[steal the drive way]
[offer to repair the drive way]
[charge inflated prices]
[use high pressure sales tactics to scare them into what happens if it doesn't go through]
[reinstall the old dive way]
[put lien on house]
[find reasons to drive the price up and delay work]
Actually, you've gotten that almost completely wrong. What they wanted to steal was not the driveway; they wanted to steal the contractor (driveway replacement worker)'s money. They pretend to be the owner looking for a driveway replacement, "accidentally" pay too much, ask for the surplus money back, and then do a chargeback on everything they paid. In this case the contractor went ahead before realizing they've been scammed. Experienced contractors ask for an in-person meeting or proof of ownership.
Never mind. It's just my app. I though Sync was good. 😭
It doesn't support nested lists, which I couldn't tell you had done because it looked so bad in my app. Sorry.
I see what it is. You're technically supposed to have a blank line before the start of your list. The Lemmy website doesn't care, but I guess Sync does.
it's simple.
[steal the drive way]
[offer to repair the drive way]
[charge inflated prices]
[use high pressure sales tactics to scare them into what happens if it doesn't go through]
[reinstall the old dive way]
[put lien on house]
[find reasons to drive the price up and delay work]
whats funny is that is lemmy markdown. (I looked it up cuz i couldn't remember if it was '1. 'or '1) ' to start . that said it could simply be that Sync formats the lists differently. Dunno. I use liftoff! on my phone without complaints.
Not exactly worthless. It is worth more than gravel. The cost to crush it is so high you still have to pay to remove it, but you don' have to pay the landfill fees as the crushers will take it cheaper.
I work in insurance claims and I believe it would. Most homeowners insurance is “open peril” meaning for structures it covers everything that is not excluded…I don’t think any exclusions apply. Even an old/cheap named peril fire policy, I would argue for coverage under vandalism and vehicle (bulldozer). Seems like someone was tricked into the vandalism AFAIK.
It's called moving. It's a tricky thing to balance buying what you want and selling what you have in a short window. You can be mad at the shit market but don't take it out on people that managed to make it happen. That's just petty jealousy.