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'Seasoned' Facebook Marketplace scammer imprisoned

'Seasoned' Facebook Marketplace scammer imprisoned

A "career" criminal is back behind bars for dishonesty after he duped people into handing over their vehicles in a Facebook scam.
A police prosecutor said during Adrian Colbert's sentencing in Tauranga that he seemed to offend "very well and very easily" and was sceptical that another stint in prison would deter him from his "chosen career path".
According to the police summary of facts, the 31-year-old used several aliases on Facebook Marketplace, including "Age Edward", "Lorenzo Matthews", "Adrian Edwards" and "Adrian James".
Between July and December last year, he used the social media platform to deceive people into thinking he had bought the cars they had listed for sale in Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland and Tauranga.
The cars included a Nissan Skyline, Toyota Aqua, Suzuki Swift, Honda CR-V, Toyota 86, Subaru Impreza, Holden Colorado, Volkswagen Golf, Volkswagen Polo and Mazda CX5.
The Colorado and Golf were both "purchased" on the same day in November last year, both in Tauranga.
Colbert would negotiate, agree a price and, when he turned up to collect the cars, would show the seller fake or altered bank statements as proof that he had transferred money for them.
When the sellers went to check their accounts after Colbert had left, the money would not be there.
They would chase him up, and he would either make excuses or not respond.
While he mostly targeted people selling cars, he also duped someone who was selling an iPhone 15.
None of the 10 cars was recovered, nor the iPhone, and the total amount owed to the victims, based on what Colbert had agreed to pay for each car, was nearly $125,000.
Despite this, no reparation orders were made at sentencing, given the unrealistic prospect of Colbert being able to make payments. His lawyer told the court he already owed $63,000 in reparations. Fake items for sale, and accommodation theft
Colbert also deceived people looking to buy through Marketplace.
He advertised a Dyson vacuum cleaner and a Samsung Galaxy Fold 6 for sale, promising to post them once payment was received.
But he never did.
In August last year, he rented a three-bedroom Airbnb for a couple of nights in Porirua.
One of the rooms was locked, but Colbert found a way in.
He stole $300 headphones, cash in a range of currencies, including euros, pounds, yen and Singapore dollars, and about $200 in mixed coins.
Last November, he checked into the Novotel Auckland Airport Hotel, paying part of the $379 owed when he arrived.
While he was there, he racked up more on his account through dining, drinks and extra nights at the hotel.
By the end, he owed $995. When he checked out, he told staff he couldn't afford the amount due and left without making any attempt to pay. A record that's reached 'a solid eight pages'
Colbert pleaded guilty to the raft of charges, the bulk of which were "obtains by deception", and was sentenced in the Tauranga District Court last week.
Judge Thomas Ingram said Colbert had obtained a "great deal of money" by deception, and he had a "long and bad record at 31 years of age".
"You've been involved in [this type] of offending fairly consistently since you first started appearing in courts back in 2016."
He had amassed a "huge number" of convictions in that time, and his record ran to a "solid eight pages", nearly all of which involved obtaining by deception with a "sprinkling of failing to comply with court orders and breach of release conditions and the like".
Judge Ingram said it "seems to be the life you have led for over a decade now".
The scale of the offending and time over which it occurred led to an "inescapable conclusion" of a prison sentence.
Colbert's lawyer, Jaiden Manera, sought a starting point of two and a half years' imprisonment.
He pointed to Colbert's engagement in a restorative justice conference as indicative of some remorse and advocated for minimal increases for previous offending.
He pointed to drug abuse as an underlying cause for the offending.
However, Judge Ingram agreed with police that a higher starting point of three and a half years was appropriate.
Sergeant Richard van Arendonk had earlier remarked that this was "generous" for Colbert.
"The amount of offending he's done, and that's just what we've caught him for," van Arendonk said.
"He's a seasoned campaigner. I don't think anything is going to make much difference for him in his chosen career path. He seems to do it very well and very easily."
Judge Ingram imposed a six-month uplift for Colbert's previous offending, and a further three months because he offended while on parole.
That led to a sentence of four years and three months, but Colbert was given a 15-month credit for his guilty plea and remorse.
He was sentenced to three years' imprisonment and was not given leave to apply for home detention.
The judge said it was not a case where he had any "realistic hope" that Colbert would pay "even one dollar" of reparation, given his record and the amount of reparation outstanding. Therefore, no reparation orders were made.
Tauranga's Area Response Manager, Senior Sergeant Scott Merritt, said Colbert was a "prolific scammer" and police were pleased to hear justice has been served with a three-year prison sentence.
He urged the public to be aware of online scams, particularly through Facebook Marketplace, and take precautions:
• Meet in a public place, with a friend, to conduct transactions.
• Examine the item before completing the transaction.
• Do not go into the person's house, or allow them into yours.
• Do not deposit money into another person's account before you have received the item.
• Trust your instincts – if it's too good to be true or sounds like a scam, it probably is.
- Hannah Bartlett, Open Justice reporter
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'Seasoned' Facebook Marketplace scammer imprisoned
'Seasoned' Facebook Marketplace scammer imprisoned

Otago Daily Times

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'Seasoned' Facebook Marketplace scammer imprisoned

A "career" criminal is back behind bars for dishonesty after he duped people into handing over their vehicles in a Facebook scam. A police prosecutor said during Adrian Colbert's sentencing in Tauranga that he seemed to offend "very well and very easily" and was sceptical that another stint in prison would deter him from his "chosen career path". According to the police summary of facts, the 31-year-old used several aliases on Facebook Marketplace, including "Age Edward", "Lorenzo Matthews", "Adrian Edwards" and "Adrian James". Between July and December last year, he used the social media platform to deceive people into thinking he had bought the cars they had listed for sale in Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland and Tauranga. The cars included a Nissan Skyline, Toyota Aqua, Suzuki Swift, Honda CR-V, Toyota 86, Subaru Impreza, Holden Colorado, Volkswagen Golf, Volkswagen Polo and Mazda CX5. The Colorado and Golf were both "purchased" on the same day in November last year, both in Tauranga. Colbert would negotiate, agree a price and, when he turned up to collect the cars, would show the seller fake or altered bank statements as proof that he had transferred money for them. When the sellers went to check their accounts after Colbert had left, the money would not be there. They would chase him up, and he would either make excuses or not respond. While he mostly targeted people selling cars, he also duped someone who was selling an iPhone 15. None of the 10 cars was recovered, nor the iPhone, and the total amount owed to the victims, based on what Colbert had agreed to pay for each car, was nearly $125,000. Despite this, no reparation orders were made at sentencing, given the unrealistic prospect of Colbert being able to make payments. His lawyer told the court he already owed $63,000 in reparations. Fake items for sale, and accommodation theft Colbert also deceived people looking to buy through Marketplace. He advertised a Dyson vacuum cleaner and a Samsung Galaxy Fold 6 for sale, promising to post them once payment was received. But he never did. In August last year, he rented a three-bedroom Airbnb for a couple of nights in Porirua. One of the rooms was locked, but Colbert found a way in. He stole $300 headphones, cash in a range of currencies, including euros, pounds, yen and Singapore dollars, and about $200 in mixed coins. Last November, he checked into the Novotel Auckland Airport Hotel, paying part of the $379 owed when he arrived. While he was there, he racked up more on his account through dining, drinks and extra nights at the hotel. By the end, he owed $995. When he checked out, he told staff he couldn't afford the amount due and left without making any attempt to pay. A record that's reached 'a solid eight pages' Colbert pleaded guilty to the raft of charges, the bulk of which were "obtains by deception", and was sentenced in the Tauranga District Court last week. Judge Thomas Ingram said Colbert had obtained a "great deal of money" by deception, and he had a "long and bad record at 31 years of age". "You've been involved in [this type] of offending fairly consistently since you first started appearing in courts back in 2016." He had amassed a "huge number" of convictions in that time, and his record ran to a "solid eight pages", nearly all of which involved obtaining by deception with a "sprinkling of failing to comply with court orders and breach of release conditions and the like". Judge Ingram said it "seems to be the life you have led for over a decade now". The scale of the offending and time over which it occurred led to an "inescapable conclusion" of a prison sentence. Colbert's lawyer, Jaiden Manera, sought a starting point of two and a half years' imprisonment. He pointed to Colbert's engagement in a restorative justice conference as indicative of some remorse and advocated for minimal increases for previous offending. He pointed to drug abuse as an underlying cause for the offending. However, Judge Ingram agreed with police that a higher starting point of three and a half years was appropriate. Sergeant Richard van Arendonk had earlier remarked that this was "generous" for Colbert. "The amount of offending he's done, and that's just what we've caught him for," van Arendonk said. "He's a seasoned campaigner. I don't think anything is going to make much difference for him in his chosen career path. He seems to do it very well and very easily." Judge Ingram imposed a six-month uplift for Colbert's previous offending, and a further three months because he offended while on parole. That led to a sentence of four years and three months, but Colbert was given a 15-month credit for his guilty plea and remorse. He was sentenced to three years' imprisonment and was not given leave to apply for home detention. The judge said it was not a case where he had any "realistic hope" that Colbert would pay "even one dollar" of reparation, given his record and the amount of reparation outstanding. Therefore, no reparation orders were made. Tauranga's Area Response Manager, Senior Sergeant Scott Merritt, said Colbert was a "prolific scammer" and police were pleased to hear justice has been served with a three-year prison sentence. He urged the public to be aware of online scams, particularly through Facebook Marketplace, and take precautions: • Meet in a public place, with a friend, to conduct transactions. • Examine the item before completing the transaction. • Do not go into the person's house, or allow them into yours. • Do not deposit money into another person's account before you have received the item. • Trust your instincts – if it's too good to be true or sounds like a scam, it probably is. - Hannah Bartlett, Open Justice reporter

Serial dishonesty offender Adrian Colbert imprisoned for Marketplace scams
Serial dishonesty offender Adrian Colbert imprisoned for Marketplace scams

NZ Herald

time2 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Serial dishonesty offender Adrian Colbert imprisoned for Marketplace scams

The cars included a Nissan Skyline, Toyota Aqua, Suzuki Swift, Honda CR-V, Toyota 86, Subaru Impreza, Holden Colorado, Volkswagen Golf, Volkswagen Polo and Mazda CX5. The Colorado and Golf were both 'purchased' on the same day in November last year, both in Tauranga. Colbert would negotiate, agree a price and, when he turned up to collect the cars, would show the seller fake or altered bank statements as proof that he had transferred money for them. When the sellers went to check their accounts after Colbert had left, the money would not be there. They would chase him up, and he would either make excuses or not respond. While he mostly targeted people selling cars, he also duped someone who was selling an iPhone 15. Adrian Colbert appeared in court via audio-visual link for sentencing last week. He was sentenced to imprisonment for his latest round of dishonest offending. None of the 10 cars was recovered, nor the iPhone, and the total amount owed to the victims, based on what Colbert had agreed to pay for each car, was nearly $125,000. Despite this, no reparation orders were made at sentencing, given the unrealistic prospect of Colbert being able to make payments. His lawyer told the court he already owed $63,000 in reparations. Fake items for sale, and accommodation theft Colbert also deceived people looking to buy through Marketplace. He advertised a Dyson vacuum cleaner and a Samsung Galaxy Fold 6 for sale, promising to post them once payment was received. But he never did. In August last year, he rented a three-bedroom Airbnb for a couple of nights in Porirua. One of the rooms was locked, but Colbert found a way in. He stole $300 headphones, cash in a range of currencies, including euros, pounds, yen and Singapore dollars, and about $200 in mixed coins. Last November, he checked into the Novotel Auckland Airport Hotel, paying part of the $379 owed when he arrived. While he was there, he racked up more on his account through dining, drinks and extra nights at the hotel. By the end, he owed $995. When he checked out, he told staff he couldn't afford the amount due and left without making any attempt to pay. A record that's reached 'a solid eight pages' Colbert pleaded guilty to the raft of charges, the bulk of which were 'obtains by deception', and was sentenced in the Tauranga District Court last week. Judge Thomas Ingram said Colbert had obtained a 'great deal of money' by deception, and he had a 'long and bad record at 31 years of age'. 'You've been involved in [this type] of offending fairly consistently since you first started appearing in courts back in 2016.' He had amassed a 'huge number' of convictions in that time, and his record ran to a 'solid eight pages', nearly all of which involved obtaining by deception with a 'sprinkling of failing to comply with court orders and breach of release conditions and the like'. Judge Ingram said it 'seems to be the life you have led for over a decade now'. The scale of the offending and time over which it occurred led to an 'inescapable conclusion' of a prison sentence. Colbert's lawyer, Jaiden Manera, sought a starting point of two and a half years' imprisonment. He pointed to Colbert's engagement in a restorative justice conference as indicative of some remorse and advocated for minimal increases for previous offending. He pointed to drug abuse as an underlying cause for the offending. However, Judge Ingram agreed with police that a higher starting point of three and a half years was appropriate. Sergeant Richard van Arendonk had earlier remarked that this was 'generous' for Colbert. 'The amount of offending he's done, and that's just what we've caught him for,' van Arendonk said. 'He's a seasoned campaigner. I don't think anything is going to make much difference for him in his chosen career path. He seems to do it very well and very easily.' Judge Ingram imposed a six-month uplift for Colbert's previous offending, and a further three months because he offended while on parole. That led to a sentence of four years and three months, but Colbert was given a 15-month credit for his guilty plea and remorse. He was sentenced to three years' imprisonment and was not given leave to apply for home detention. The judge said it was not a case where he had any 'realistic hope' that Colbert would pay 'even one dollar' of reparation, given his record and the amount of reparation outstanding. Therefore, no reparation orders were made. Tauranga's Area Response Manager, Senior Sergeant Scott Merritt, said Colbert was a 'prolific scammer' and police were pleased to hear justice has been served with a three-year prison sentence. He urged the public to be aware of online scams, particularly through Facebook Marketplace, and take precautions: Meet in a public place, with a friend, to conduct transactions. Examine the item before completing the transaction. Do not go into the person's house, or allow them into yours. Do not deposit money into another person's account before you have received the item. Trust your instincts – if it's too good to be true or sounds like a scam, it probably is. Hannah Bartlett is a Tauranga-based Open Justice reporter at NZME. She previously covered court and local government for the Nelson Mail, and before that was a radio reporter at Newstalk ZB.

Michigan autoworker's lost wallet is found in Minnesota car— 11 years later
Michigan autoworker's lost wallet is found in Minnesota car— 11 years later

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Michigan autoworker's lost wallet is found in Minnesota car— 11 years later

A retired Michigan autoworker looked at a Facebook message after midnight from a stranger: Did you lose your wallet years ago? 'If so,' a Minnesota man wrote, 'it was in the engine bay of a car.' Richard Guilford couldn't believe what he was reading on his phone — a decade-old mystery was remarkably solved. Guilford's tri-fold leather wallet — stuffed with US$15 (NZ$25), a driver's license, work ID, gift cards worth US$275 (NZ$463) and lottery tickets — had turned up under the hood of a car in a repair shop in Lake Crystal, Minnesota. The old wallet of Richard Guilford. (Source: Associated Press) ADVERTISEMENT A Christmas gift from Guilford's sons was suddenly a family treasure again. 'Big Red,' as he was affectionately known at Ford Motor, was in awe. 'It restores your faith in humanity that people will say, 'Hey, you lost this, I found this, I'm going to get it back to you'," Guilford said Thursday. The wallet was discovered in June by mechanic Chad Volk, sandwiched between the transmission and the air filter box of a 2015 Ford Edge with 243,010 km on it. 'Crazy,' Volk said. The filter box wouldn't snap in place after a repair, he said, 'so I messed around a little bit and then pulled it back out and the wallet was sitting on a little ledge where it needed to snap down. I pulled the wallet out and that's what it was.' Turn back the calendar to 2014, around Christmas. Guilford was working on the same car at a Ford factory in Wayne, Michigan. It was in a long line of new vehicles assembled elsewhere that needed extra electrical work before being shipped to dealers. Guilford realised later that his wallet had fallen out of his shirt pocket. He was certain he had lost it in a car, but figured it was on the floor of a Ford Flex, not an Edge, and certainly not in the engine. ADVERTISEMENT Guilford said he searched 30 to 40 cars, and his co-workers looked at dozens more, 'just opening the doors up, looking under the seats, looking behind it.' 'I can't take too much time to look for this because I gotta work. I'm on the clock," he recalled feeling. "No luck. Life went on.' Richard Guilford in front of items found in his lost wallet. (Source: Associated Press) Guilford, now 56 and living in Petersburg, Michigan, retired from Ford in 2024 after nearly 35 years. He had put the wallet out of his mind long ago, until getting the message in Facebook, where his profile said he had worked at Ford. Volk messaged a photo of the wallet and included the driver's license. 'Big Red' saw a younger version of himself with his red-tinged beard. Richard Guilford holds up a chat message he received from Chad Volk. (Source: Associated Press) 'The amazing part to me was it was so protected,' Guilford said of the wallet as he also traced the car's history. 'Think about this: 11 years, rain, snow. It was in Minnesota, for crying out loud. It was in Arizona when it was bought. Think about how hot a transmission gets in Arizona driving down the road. That's incredible.' ADVERTISEMENT Cabela's, an outdoor retailer, said the US$250 (NZ$422) in gift cards remain valid, but it has offered to give him new cards anyway. Guilford doesn't know the status of a US$25 (NZ$42) card from Outback Steakhouse. The numbers on the lottery tickets faded long ago. Richard Guilford holds up a lottery ticket he purchased 11 years ago. (Source: Associated Press) 'I'm going to put everything back in it and leave it just like it is, and it's gonna sit at the house in the china cabinet and that's for my kids,' said Guilford, a part-time auctioneer. 'They can tell my great-grandkids about it. We're big into stories. I like tellin' stories. That's just who I am.'

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