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Ever see a car or truck go by with a Red Bull logo on it, maybe Coca-Cola or Dr Pepper? They show up at festivals and concerts all summer long.So imagine getting paid every month just for having an ad like that on your car.Susan Miller's 17-year-old niece thought it would be a great first job."She was looking for work, was freshly graduated, and she went to some online job hunting sites," Miller said.The recent high school grad entered her information.Beverage company offers ad gigSo when she received a text from Dr Pepper Snapple Group offering to pay her to wrap her car with ads, the young woman was obviously interested.A few days later she received a large packet in the mail."To my surprise she got a check from PNC bank for ,500," Miller said.The instructions told her to deposit the check, then wire half of it to the car wrapping agent, and keep the rest for herself. Then her car would be wrapped with Dr Pepper advertising.It sounded like easy money: anywhere from 0 to 0 a month just to put a sticker on your car advertising a soft drink.But Miller immediately felt the whole thing was suspicious. Thank goodness, she says, that she opened the envelope before her niece did."If she had opened this, she probably would have been at the bank and cashed it," Miller said.And it would have bounced.Many companies targeted by this scamDr Pepper Snapple Group has issued an alert that this job offer is a scam. They are not paying people to put ads on their car (see full statement below).Red Bull, Rockstar Energy Drink, Casio watches and Nike are likewise not paying people to put their logo on their car. But people are falling for it because the job offer sounds plausible (we have all seen marketing cars), and the checks appear perfectly legitimate."This check does look real," Miller said. "It's from PNC bank. And from what I understand, if you deposit it and spend your money you're responsible to pay it back." The check is not a real PNC check, but rather is a sophisticated forgery.That would have been a tough life lesson for a young woman just out of high school.Bottom line: No beverage company will pay someone who is not a company employee to drive a car with their logos on it. If you have an accident or are caught speeding they could be liable.So avoid these offers, so you don't waste your money._______________________FULL STATEMENT FROM DR PEPPER SNAPPLE GROUP:"We do not have a program offering to wrap cars in advertising graphics for any of our brands. Anyone sending these offers does not represent Dr Pepper Snapple Group or any of our brands and is most likely attempting a scam."___________________________Don't Waste Your Money" is a registered trademark of Scripps Media, Inc. ("Scripps"). 2755
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – A flight attendant may have recently exposed passengers to hepatitis A, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC says it was notified on Oct. 1 that an “aircraft contact investigation” was needed because an attendant showed hepatitis A symptoms during flights, and the person had handled food and beverages."Because the flight attendant had diarrhea on several flights within the infectious period, contact investigations were done to notify passengers," wrote the CDC in a statement. "The airline is notifying other crew staffing those flights." 609

DEARBORN, Mich. — Most people have a favorite grocery story, but some are taking the closure of a Kroger in metro Detroit especially hard. In fact, they're holding a candlelight vigil and will sing “Amazing Grace” as the Kroger on 23000 Michigan Ave. in Dearborn, Michigan, closes its doors at 5 p.m. Saturday. The store, dubbed “KrogerJack” because it originally opened in 1995 as the largest Farmer Jack location at the time, will close due to financial reasons. 65+ y/o Dearbornians trying to get into Kroger Jack next week 540
DENVER, Colo. – No matter if you’re a grandparent, parent or even a child, our phones are how we stay connected. Now, one company is taking the cellphone experience to a whole new level. Beth Veen and the rest of the team at 237
CHICAGO, Illinois (WBBM) — Federal charges were filed against Donald Greene Sr. and Donald Green Jr. -- a Chicago area father and son -- for allegedly selling body parts on the black market from people who thought they were donating to science.The pair also allegedly sold parts they knew were diseased without telling their buyers.Bodies known to have HIV, sepsis and hepatitis kept on ice, then sold.Some were sold for up to 0,000.The father and son duo was behind the now shuttered Biological Resource Center of Illinois.Per a search warrant, a mother was told her son’s tissues would be donated to colleges and research centers.Instead, parts of him sold for ,000.In the charges filed, United States attorneys repeatedly call it a scheme "to defraud customers of the Biological Resource Center of Illinois."It's not illegal to dismember and broker body parts -- per se.But it is illegal to knowingly sell remains positive for infectious disease.It is alleged the Greene’s did this from 2008 to 2014.The federal document charging the Greene’s alleges the men sold to Detroit Medical Center’s sports medicine department at least one specimen that “had previously tested positive for hepatitis. This fact was concealed by Donald A. Greene Sr.'s scheme to defraud."Greene Sr. is charged with wire fraud.While Greene Jr. faces a felony for intentionally concealing a crime.Authorities were led to the Greene’s while investigating Detroit body broker Arthur Rathburn, who is now in federal prison. 1517
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