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Bad Guy Yuki Maeda Scam Fauna Name: (Sergei)

Actually, I find it rather difficult to believe that FedEx would have turned over a package to someone that had a different name and address than what was shown on the label. I would think a FedEx driver could lose their job doing something like this.

Due to a numbering mixup, there is a cul-de-sac in my neighborhood which has nearly identical addresses to the ones on my street. If I was less honest, I could have had two brand-new Dell laptops recently, because the driver just left them on my porch instead of delivering to the similarly-numbered-but-CT-not-ST address's residents, who have entirely different last names than I or my husband do.

This sort of thing happens ALL THE TIME, probably two or three times a month, and we have yet to get either the FedEx driver or the UPS driver(s) responsible fired or otherwise reprimanded. We're just expected to deal with it and take the wrongly-delivered packages to the proper owners ourselves. So I don't find this as fishy as others might. It really is dependent on the quality of your particular driver(s).
 
According to the tracking info, one package was sent from Illinois and one was sent from New Hampshire?

The 'right' return-address shipment was sent to a C.Chen...so either Andrew used a fake name or Yuki confused two shipments or customer names.

I think Andrew stole the other shipment from a neighbor and made all this up. The other tracking number (the one sent from Illinois) would be on the label (?).

Also, Yuki just completed a good transaction recently...why?


Too much doesn't add up. I think both parties should be dealt with very carefully, if at all.
 
People can make good transactions and bad ones. Im for the op .
I sold yuki a nosy be and she said it got there dead. I recently received some proof that I'm waiting on a second opinion before bring out the proof. I want to get an unbiased opinion before I show my hand.andrew is a good guy I've heard of him before. After all these opinions who ended up getting screwed? Andrew is out a nosy be what is yuki out ?? Nothing. The only reason Andrew is not here is because he just cut his losses. Not because he's lying

Sent from my SGH-M919 using Tapatalk
 
The idea that this small-time fauna seller would have three shipments of ANYTHING to the exact neighborhood as Andrew is unbelievable. It is obvious to me that it was all part of the same grand "scam".

I agree - well, sort of. You were the one promoting the mislabeling theory just a few posts ago...I could see "her" intentionally putting the wrong address, maybe even a fake name (which is a pretty foolish approach for regular deals because it would nullify PayPal's seller protections); but how many scammers will actually go through the trouble of finding legitimate names and addresses?
As Rich said, FedEx turning over the package seems suspect...my guess is that Andrew overstated their complicity. Perhaps, when calling to find out where his package was, he was told that it had been delivered to SoN So at XXX Whatsit St. If Andrew went and collected his package without the addressee's permission; one could argue that he was in the wrong - especially since the ONLY thing he had accurate was the tracking number (shipper, recipient, and deliver address were all wrong for the packages he was expecting ). Sure, the whole thing was a scam; but, if he'd been seen taking the package(s), his explanation wouldn't have flown.
The PayPal response was off, as well. I've reported emails, and gotten responses - If it was legit, Andrew got the rare rep that doesn't use the canned answer.

Again, Yuki didn't dispute those things. Instead, it was a display of pathetic scammery that pretty much turned readers against her story...but that doesn't mean anything added up afterwards.
 
The tracking numbers supplied by both parties are indeed goofy. On his Post #26, Andrew supplied links to FedEx shipments that were confusing. Shots below. One might correspond to the fish filter (envelope and weight). The other is a shipment BACK to Hudson, NH where Yuki lives.

I believe there are parties named C. Chen and Rainbolt in Dyer, IN. On the package addressed to C. Chen is the phone number 603-321-5175, next to his name. 603 is the area code for NH. What am I missing here?

Then, Yuki sends this to Andrew:
On Mar 26, 2014, at 9:17 PM, Yuki Maeda <[email protected]> wrote:

> Ok, so tracking number to the most recent packages were 79832189172 and 798343103550
Tracking each of those, the first seems to be non-existent. The second appears to be a 17-lb. package being sent from Maine to Hudson, NH (again, where Yuki lives)

Fist two shots are the links that Andrew posted, the third is the only shipment of the two Yuki told Andrew were "the most recent".

What the heck am I not getting?
 

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shinichi and kei maeda living in hudson nh have 2 daughters, mei and yuki. kei the mom of these grown children has a piano studio in hudson new hampshire and is also an artist of sorts. mei is an accomplished dancer. yuki is a professional scammer, lizard collector, equestrian enthusiast and likely talented in other ways despite being a massive underachiever and thief. 9 mallard drive hudson nh is the correct address. maeda's have/had a house around the corner as well. the scamming is actually very accomplished. as you have witnessed, she is able to make up total nonsense and still have you all second guessing each other and working hard to try and keep up. i'm in the same boat. but she's a massive head case, to a fault. the best scammers get in / get out / stay quiet. but this one likes the danger and the interaction. there is no lawyer. there never will be a lawyer, except perhaps acting to prosecute her someday. anyway, i am only on here tying all the bits and pieces together with what i already knew. privately i can give any of you more information, but i'm not putting in here for her to see. just know that i have verified quite well, actually physically verified.
 
The problem with pathological liars is that the rest of us are so innocent we just cannot believe that the lies could be so intricately wound, and they are so convoluted or incredulous they simply must be true. These people skirt the edges of incredulity because that is part of the "high" they get from lying. Trust me... I was romantically involved with one, once, and the experience was incredibly enlightening. The thrill is not just to get away with lying, but to see JUST HOW MUCH they can get away with.
 
Wow!!

I look at some of these boi threads most of the time out of pure curiosity as I'm new to the whole Internet side of sales and wow!!! Extremely enlightening on how far somebody will go to fabricate a story..can't a major criminal case be opened up on a con-artist/scammer if they're reported to their local authorities?
 
One and the same? :shrug01:

Hudson Woman Arrested for Prescription Incidents
http://patch.com/new-hampshire/nashua/hudson-woman-arrested-prescription-incidents-0

By TONY SCHINELLA (Patch Staff)
October 22, 2014 - Hudson Woman Arrested for Prescription Incidents
A local woman was arrested yesterday by the New Hampshire State Police Narcotics and Investigations Unit Drug Diversion Section on prescription charges.
According to a press statement, state police received information from the Osco Pharmacy in Windham that fraudulent prescriptions for Tramadol were passed at the store. The scripts were obtained from a Massachusetts doctor and it was determined later that the prescriptions were fake and the doctor’s signature had been forged, according to police. “Further investigation revealed Yuki Maeda had presented a similar fraudulent prescription for Tramadol at the Nashua Osco pharmacy,” according to Sgt. Robert Lefoley, of the NH State Police – Narcotics & Investigations Unit. Maeda, 27, of Mallard Drive in Hudson, was arrested yesterday. She is due in court on Dec. 3, in Nashua District Court and Dec. 10, in Salem District Court.
 

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Eagle Tribune: Woman charged with forging prescriptions in Windham
http://www.eagletribune.com/news/ne...cle_2ee02318-a2a5-5fec-897d-9e9501f4f548.html

"Posted: Thursday, October 23, 2014 12:05 am
WINDHAM — A Hudson woman was arrested for allegedly trying to fill fake prescriptions at the Osco Pharmacy. Yuki Maeda, 27, was arrested Tuesday by the New Hampshire State Police Narcotics and Investigations Unit Drug Diversion Section. Police received a complaint from Osco Pharmacy at 43 Indian Rock Road about fraudulent prescriptions for Tramadol, a painkiller. The prescriptions, police said, were supposed to have been written by a Massachusetts doctor, but police determined the prescriptions were fake and the doctor's signature had been forged. Police then discovered Maeda allegedly presented another fake prescription for Tramadol at the Osco Pharmacy in nashua. Maeda is scheduled to appear in 9th Circuit Court in Nashua on Dec. 3 and 10th Circuit Court in Salem on Dec. 10."
 
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