210-888-9089
TX, US
scammed
scammed
2011-06-16 20:27:03
Unknown
lol. I ordered 14 pills, they sent me 5. didn't respond to e-mails. at least they half ripped me off. or like 75% ripped me off. They answered the 2108889089 number once and act like it's in his pocket. listening to music then calling some air filter company and bs-ing them for a while. acting all weird. what a f-face

http://rxpillsxag59.ru
Gary
Gary
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I am getting incessant emails to my work email address.  Don't these criminals think that once a day gets there point across?  I have tried to reply asking to be removed from their mailing list, but they do not go through.  It is sad that these guys with all their technology prowess do not choose to run a legitimate honest business.  It is apparent that they have the brain power. Some people just gravitate to the dark side. They have no decency within them.  I agree with the earlier comment, that it is time for Government to get serious about this crime against so many common people. Too many people are being victimized by these creeps.
Dale
Dale
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
This Spammer is very clever. It said from ME....to ME. So I can't report it as spam as I'd be reporting myself. The website sayd WebMD which I believe is a legitimate website where you can get medical information. Somehow they must have got my name from them when I asked a question. I got is phone number when I looked at the ad.
Sara
Sara
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Gary, if you keep receiving spams, forward
all of them to the following email addresses;

jowens@unifiedmarket.com
dmoonfire@unifiedmarket.com
uminfo@unifiedmarket.com
dholden@unifiedmarket.com

He has the tendency not to send spams if you
retaliate!
SpamKillah
SpamKillah
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I called this number, and it had a recording that mentions Web site uphsupport.com. I reported this site to its U.S.-based registrar and said it was used to support a criminal operation (illegal online pharmacy, e.g. 04-04.net).

This operation has been spamming me for at least a year, and I don't know what it will take to shut him down for good. I doubt he is doing it in the U.S. because sale of medications to people who don't have prescriptions for them is against the law. He also used the Health and Human Services logo on his Web site a while ago, and misuse of the logo of a government agency also is against the law. He has stopped doing this, though, and he has also stopped misusing the Verisign and/or TrustE logos. I recall reporting him for that, and also for criminal misuse of the logo of a U.S. government agency.

It wouldn't surprise me if these sites just steal your credit card information for misuse and/or resale. If they actually processed a credit card, law enforcement could place an order and then get a warrant or subpoena to make the bank that handles the transaction reveal the identity of the person who runs the site--if he sends them medications without a prescription, he's guilty of a crime right there--so I don't think he sends anybody anything. It's probably a phishing site.
Bru
Bru
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
The good news is that this scammer has extreme hatered against receiving spams. It's rather irony, isn't it? So forward all the spams to the following email addresses. Send them using different email addresses as many as possible, so that he won't be able to block your email addresses. He has the tendency that if you send a lot of spams to him, he will remove you from his spam databases. You can also automate your email system to redirect to him. Then congratulations! You will get far less spams!

jowens@unifiedmarket.com
owensw@unifiedmarket.com
dmoonfire@unifiedmarket.com
uminfo@unifiedmarket.com
dholden@unifiedmarket.com
Stuart
Stuart
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Hi Folks

I've been getting these emails too - im a system admin for my company and we get between 50,000-60,000 spam emails a week from people like this.

We have a program called Symantec Mail Security which allows you to do all kinds of fun things with spam, including routing all spam email to alternative address's

I have just added this guys email address to our routing system so his email address will soon be completely full of lots and lots of wonderful spam (the majority of it i guess he is sending himself.

If we have a sudden decrease in spam, ill let you know and ill find a link to the mail security site so you guys can spend the $400 odd to get rid of this guy from your lives ( the program redirects mail even when the license expires so if you have an old copy get it reinstalled and have a bit of a play ;) )

All the best

Stuart
Stuart
Stuart
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
haha 45 emails already redirected to him in the time it took me to write that post.

the joys of spamming spammers its great.
Jonas
Jonas
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Suggestion to anybody reading these forums. At your earliest opportunity create 5 new email accounts and forward 1 of the spam emails to each of them. The idea is to get those addresses added to the spammer's lists, Yahoo works wonderfully as it seems a Yahoo address gets spammed like made even if you never put it on an app.  Then setup your account to auto forward all spam emails to the world market addresses.  When you start getting the mailer daemon reply kill the account and create another.  By that time the bastards should have received hundreds of thousands from each of your 5 accounts. Their mail server will become so inundated with incoming mail at the very least it will cut back their outbound pipe and of course the increase man hours required to combat the barrage of spam rofl.
patty
patty
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I received an email from 'me' re: the Canadian pharmacy - however, doesn't show in my 'sent mail' so they aren't hacking. I don't know how they do this - but, if you click all the way through the message - it does identify the CAnadian pharmacy.  I telephoned the number - bad connection - two long noises that could have been 'rings' - and then the call disconnected. I am going to sent to the ISP as SPAM.  I don't know what else to do - disturbing, however, to see a message from my email address than I didn't send.
Tammy R
Tammy R
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I am getting emails daily from this company and don't even know who they are.  I havent even ordered anything on line, so not sure why they are emailing me.  I have searched their whole site and can't find a way to contact them except for a phone number which doesn't go through.  they are even emailing me using my own email addy.  THIS IS DRIVING ME CRAZY!  Does anyone know how to stop it!!!!???????
Lunatic
Lunatic
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Just use email on such service like gmail.com. this service have good antispam filters. Make forward from your emails to your emails on gmail.
Fighting Back
Fighting Back
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I receive around 200 of these fishing scams for this viagra crap daily.

I have set up a mailbox on my mail server that I forward these emails to.  Once I forward an email to this mail box, a special program gets launched by several servers I own.

In a nut-shell, I have a specific program that targets these websites that are listed in the Viagra Scam emails and bombards the order processing page with 100,000 fake orders an hour.  As soon as the website goes offline, the program stops running.  I have taken extensive time setting up a database with over 100,000 different first names and around 60,000 different last names.  The names are randomly matched up for each order.  As for mailing addresses, I have a copy of the US Postal Zip Code database.  The street addresses are completely random with valid city and zip combos.  As for credit card info, I generate random Credit Card Numbers that pass the LUN test and fail if you try and truly run them through a credit card processor.

I did some tests to see if these scam website truly do live Credit Card processing.  They don't.  All they do is check to see if the credit card number passes the LUN test and claim the order was successfully processed.

I am hoping that my efforts with filling their database and/or their email boxes with complete bogus orders that looks completely legitimate will foil their attempts to get valid credit card numbers to steel.  If 1 out of 100,000 credit card numbers received is valid, then that 1 credit card number is pretty safe since these scammers will give up on trying each and every credit card number they received pretty quickly.

Think about it, if you have a database with 10,000,000 credit card numbers that are bogus and out of the 10,000,000 credit card numbers only 10 - 20 are valid good luck figuring which ones are good.  You would be better off trying to locate a Needle made out of bone in a Hay Stack.
Ron
Ron
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I've tried sending the e-mails you suggested, but they were returned to me.  I suppose the guy has caught on by now and has changed all the e-mail addresses.  I get several hundred of these each day.  I wish someone could catch the idiot.
Hi Ron
Hi Ron
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
No he did not changed his email addresses! He's just pretending. He cannot change his connections to other colluders. What is happening is that he can setup his email server to reject your emails. But if you change sending email addresses and thus servers, he will receive your mails!

Note that his emails have auto reply pretending that denying your emails. But in fact your emails are delivered. So unless it is server rejection, your emails are delivered. Keep forwarding emails to;

 jowens@unifiedmarket.com
 owensw@unifiedmarket.com
 dmoonfire@unifiedmarket.com
 uminfo@unifiedmarket.com
 dholden@unifiedmarket.com

Spamming spammers with thier own spams is a joy!
Hi Ron
Hi Ron
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
PS;

If delivery failure message is generated by your own email server, the scammer's email server is configured to refuse your email server IP. Otherwise your email is delivered. But you receive auto-response emails pretending that delivery failure occurred. I have tested this before!
Carmela
Carmela
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Keep getting eamils from myself and askes me to opt out and keep going to an order page.  Need this to stop
Hi Carmela
Hi Carmela
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
This scammer uses your email address for both sender and receiver. So put a spam filter for anything that sender is your email, since you will never send anything to your email account from the same account.
matze = Jonathan Owens
matze = Jonathan Owens
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
matze = Jonathan Owens
gaz
gaz
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I have received another one of the dam emails about the medical company the sender forgot to include the bouncer email address facility and left their own instead, for all those people interested her is their email addres

Johanne-elletsel@cyberbearings.com
IFW
IFW
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
210-888-9089 is illegal and in violation of federal codes.  False advertising, wire fraud and mail fraud.  They use other companies e-mail addresses.
They claim to be licensed by the:
College of Pharmacists of British Columbia
200-1765 West 8th Ave.
V6J5C6
Vancouver, British Columbia
Alex
Alex
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Nice news)) i sent an email to jdanholden@gmail.com and got an answer.
He reads your mail, for sure! there's even avatar - his photo,  attached to his gmail acc.
reply:
=========================================
Same to you

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
From: ##########@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2010 23:38:44 +0300
To: <jowens@unifiedmarkets.com>; <owensw@unifiedmarkets.com>; <dmoonfire@unifiedmarkets.com>; <uminfo@unifiedmarkets.com>; <dholden@unifiedmarkets.com>
Subject: f*** off

b*tch
uh oh
uh oh
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I think i know this person
dave
dave
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Hi
I am receiving 2-3 email from Canadian pharmacy with phone number (1 210-888-9089)
I have sent so many emails to remove my name from newsletter listing, but unfortunately, no responding from this company,
illegal and in violation of federal codes.  False advertising, wire fraud and mail fraud.
Never contact or shopping from this Company.
David
David
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Hi
I am receiving 2-3 email from Canadian pharmacy with phone number (1 210-888-9089)
I have sent so many emails to remove my name from newsletter listing, but unfortunately, no responding from this company,
illegal and in violation of federal codes.  False advertising, wire fraud and mail fraud.
Never contact or shopping from this Company.
Jeff
Jeff
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Looks like we're f@#$ed until we change our email address, which I've done.  Pain, I know, but it works.  BUT, that doesn't always get it...sometimes you have to reformat your hard drive.  My MIT buddy did that for me, and that eventually cleared up EVERYTHIG.  Thing is, I wouldn't want to have to do that on my own.  Not everybody has a friend from MIT to fix their computers!
Obama
Obama
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Please stop the emails
pissedoffinamerica
pissedoffinamerica
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
I say we form a militia and hunt these f***ers down like good americans would!
inundated == the spammer
inundated == the spammer
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
Any one posting misleading messages here is the
criminal scammer. That's the trick Jonathan Owens
often uses!
scammer
scammer
2011-06-06 20:42:40
Unknown
This fellow uses the following phone numbers
for scams;

  210-888-9089 - Canadian Pharmacy
  845-709-8044 - Bogus university degree
  718-524-2096 - Bogus OEM software
1-786-304-3867 1-424-279-0155 1-856-917-3104
Call Type:
Comment:
Your name:
Validation:
© WHOSCALL.IN 2011-2024 - Privacy