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Clare Students Warned Not To Be Caught Out By Rental Scams

Clare’s Crime Prevention Officer is warning young people not to be caught out by rental scams, as they go in search of accommodation for college or employment.

With CAO first round offers out tomorrow, Sergeant Catriona Holohan says prospective renters should look out for certain red flags, such as the landlord claiming to be out of the country and unable to show the property without a deposit.

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Gardaí have become aware of another scam involving a landlord taking a deposit from a number of people who had viewed the property and disappearing with the money.

 

Sergeant Holohan, who’s based at the Crime Prevention Unit at Ennis Garda Station says there are a number of signs renters should be on the look out for.

“It’s only advertised through social media or the person letting the location will only communicate via Messenger or WhatsApp. You should push for direct answers and if responses are vague disengage immediately.

“Where your knowledge of it came from an unsolicited contact / social media feed / pop-up advert or where the contact appears to be based in other jurisdictions.

“There is a sense of urgency like a one-time offer. The listing contains grammar or spelling mistakes and/or there are very limited details or pictures of the property. The landlord is unable to meet up to show you the property in person.

“When communication is only through text / WhatsApp or other social media platforms. “When the property is offered with no questions asked and payment demanded immediately before signing the lease. “When you are asked to pay cash, cryptocurrency or money via a non-bank transfer (such as wire transfer).

“Or where the bank account you are asked to send the money to is in a different country” Sergeant Holohan concluded.

Garda Advice for people who are looking for accommodation:

-Do your own research on the advertisement and the property.

-Only use recognised letting agencies or deal with people who are bona fide and trusted ie, the college or student unions.

-Be wary of cloned websites: ensure the site is real – check the URL, look for the trust seals; check the privacy policy, refunds policy section, contact sections, even for spelling errors; check the website’s policy on refunds.

– If you have decided to take up the offer only use trusted money transfer systems – An Garda Síochána would recommend using a credit card.

– Never agree to rent a property without first having the opportunity to view it.

– Ensure that the keys work and you have proper contact details for the landlord/agent.
• Ideally the property would be registered with the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB). This can be checked on their website.

– Fully research the area to find out what the average asking prices are and compare to the advertisement/offer.

– Ideally, meet with the landlord for a tour of the accommodation. If this is not possible for some reason (this reason should be on your part, the landlord has no excuse), ask as many verifiable questions as possible such as: What bus routes are nearby? What local facilities are there (supermarkets etc)?

– Ask for the exact address and verify the existence of the property. Check Google maps to see that the property is the same as that advertised. Reverse image search any posted images to see if they appear elsewhere on the internet.

– The RTB rent index provides students with important benchmark information and is an authoritative guide as to the actual rents being charged by landlords adjacent to all universities and other third level colleges.

Garda Advice on Payment Methods:

– Do not hand over cash or make a Revolut payment or send money to an account or pay by cryptocurrency

– Pay in a way that is traceable and/or refundable.

– Insist upon a proper receipt and a tenancy agreement (get someone to look at it if you are unfamiliar with tenancy agreements).
• Don’t enter into off-site communications for a lower cash price.

– Never give personal, financial or security information to persons who are unknown to you.

– Never transfer money direct, pay cash, iTunes vouchers or pay into cryptocurrency wallets.

-• Be wary if a website is asking you to send money to a random PayPal address or asking you to wire it by Western Union or pay in iTunes gift cards or ask you to pay for long-term rental accommodation via a short-term letting website or only deals in cryptocurrency. Most of the time, those methods are done to avoid scrutiny and ensure that a transaction can not be reversed.

– Always report it to Gardaí and your bank and ask your bank to do a recall as soon as possible.

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