YiamCross wrote:Good business to be in this not really a bank bank business. No one seems able to do anything about a bloke in a camper van with a mailing address pretending to be a bank while he happily collects real cash and issues dud cheques and, soon, dud cash too.
The state isn't going to spend a lot of time or energy trying to stop greedy, stupid people from throwing their money at a scam. The sort of people who are attracted to PoE's "welsh on your debts and cheat your neighbours" scheme are not particularly deserving of sympathy. If he started scamming little old ladies out of their pensions, things would be very different.
The flip-side of course is that PoE's target market are also somewhat more likely to kick the feculant out of him, when they realise they've been taken for Charlies. And if they were to talk to each other and then set out to confront him, things could get ugly real fast.
It is sometimes imagined that PoE's itinerant wanderings in the "Scam-pervan" are to evade law enforcement. That's nonsense - it is trivial to arrange for Facebook to notify Police whenever he posts, and from what IP address. Police can then call the ISP and get an address, or triangulate from cell towers. If they wanted PoE, they could pick him up any time. And he knows that. He's more concerned with staying out of the way of his customers, especially the ones who've just lost their homes.