Woman Buys Wooden iPad for $180



I wish that she had talked to me first. I would have gotten her one for half that price. Plus a small handling fee, of course. But like the wooden iPad that a woman in South Carolina purchased, it wouldn't have worked. According to the police report, the victim:

[...] told deputies that she was approached by two black males who claimed to have purchased iPads in bulk and were selling them for $300 apiece. After McDowell explained that she only had $180, the duo agreed to sell her the device at a cut rate.

But when McDowell drove home and opened the FedEx box containing the iPad, she instead discovered the wood with the Apple logo. The “screen”--which was framed with black tape--included replicas of iPad icons for Safari, mail, photos, and an iPod. It also had what cops described as a “Best Buy sales ticket.”


Link -via Technabob | Photo: Spartanburg County Sheriff

As much as I want to eat up this whole story feel sorry for her (or laugh), a part of me wants to feel skeptical that she was approached by "two black males," or so she claims. She can be saying that because it's so easy for anybody to believe and to cover her immense stupidity conducted elsewhere.
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lets just say i was going to buy an ipad just like she did,i would of said to open up the fed ex box first before i pay....i think this woman was hit with a stupid stick.....no commonsense in this one.
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Sounds apocryphal. Kinda like a blonde joke. Possible, but did it really happen?

I was only ever approached by a white guy selling stereo equipment from the back of his truck once.

I did have a black couple (a guy and his one-toothed girlfriend) try to sell me used videotapes a couple of years ago in Baltimore. One was Top Gun.
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The things that happen in Spartanburg never cease to amaze me. It is quite possibly the strangest city in the world. I've lived here off and on for most of my life, but have seen enough of the rest of the world to know that Spartanburg is one very weird place.
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She didn't even open the box first? There could have been just papers in there...It's too bad she didn't have $300 on her because she deserved to lose her money for being so stupid
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I'm amazed that nobody has pointed out that these guys went to much more trouble than most similar conmen. It's the old pig in a poke trick and it's hundreds of years old.

The con usually goes that the vendor shows the prospective customer a working device, indeed they often let them try it out. And then once the mark gets out their wallet the conman goes back to their vehicle on the pretext of bagging up the goods or getting a fresh one in a sealed box. They then hand over the goods in a closed bag or box and take the cash and split. Except the bag is now full of useless junk of a similar weight to the goods. For some reason it's commonly bottled water. Of course the scam works on the greed of the mark and their belief that they are somehow putting one over on the somebody. That way the buyer will get the hell out of there sharpish without checking the contents of the package, before the seller changes his mind or the police turn up. And of course since even a fool knows that a deal that good must be dodgy they will be reluctant to contact the police for fear of looking foolish or even getting into trouble themselves. And of course the seller will do what they can to enforce this belief by hinting that the sale isn't exactly cosher.

Take a look here for the most recent occurence I'm aware of http://tinyurl.com/3dtlvb7

In the days of the pig in a poke trick the seller would show the healthy piglet to the buyer. On receipt of the cash they would go round the back to stick the pig in a sack tie the top of the bag and hand over a wriggling sack. Exept of course the wriggling animal in the sack would be something worthless of similar weight to the pig.
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I'm assuming the story is not true because of the wooden iPad replica. Why bother making a wooden replica? They could just as well have put a brick in there. Not unsurprisingly it's called the "brick in a box” scam btw.

The wooden replica however makes it newsworthy. Therefore as far as I'm concerned this is guerrilla marketing: you get coverage in a ton of newspapers and websites (this one included) for the price of one women willing to lie and a piece of wood.
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