Don’t be fooled by Hurricane Harvey flood scams
two sons had to be airlifted from their flooded apartment building. You can watch their dramatic helicopter rescue captured by the local ABC station KTRK at http://abc13.co/2wgZx2g. “We came home,” he said. “It wasn’t raining, and 45 minutes later we in a flood.”
On seeing comments about other accounts for the Richard family, one person wrote, “I will donate directly to them. But I will not support scammers.”
I reached out to Richard, and he confirmed in an email his concern about the other campaigns. “Yeah a lot of people have been trying to contact me making sure they have the right page.”
In advance of Harvey, GoFundMe created a Medium post about
safety measures being taken to protect donors. Before you give please read the post: http://bit.ly/2x1VjOp.
“We have multiple technical tools to verify a beneficiary’s identity and the information about the campaign prior to the transfer of funds,” said Bobby Whithorne, a spokesman for GoFundMe. “We are also monitoring all campaign organizers related to Harvey.”
In cases like the Richard family, where multiple people create a campaign, Whithorne said the site has the ability to combine the multiple fundraising efforts. “We’ll work with the campaign organizers and the beneficiaries to make sure the money is routed to the proper account.”
To view all Harvey related GoFundMe campaigns go to www.gofundme.com/hurricaneharvey.
My plea to you is please don’t become a victim. The more folks fall for disaster scams, the more emboldened the con artists become.
Be wise with your giving. Don’t let your heart get in the way of helping in the right way.