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Queenstown Airport latest victim of $3 bag scam

Author
Thomas Bywater,
Publish Date
Mon, 8 Apr 2024, 8:58am
Logos from Air New Zealand and Auckland Airport are used in the common scam. Photo / NZ Herald
Logos from Air New Zealand and Auckland Airport are used in the common scam. Photo / NZ Herald

Queenstown Airport latest victim of $3 bag scam

Author
Thomas Bywater,
Publish Date
Mon, 8 Apr 2024, 8:58am

Queenstown Airport has said a purported $3 luggage sale on its premises is a scam, warning travellers that adverts circulating on Facebook claiming to be a lost property sale are fake.

Adverts claiming to be from the airport state that 鈥渄ue to overcrowded airport lockers鈥 unclaimed lost luggage was being sold at $3 a lot.

Despite bearing the contact details of Queenstown Airport, a warning was issued on Friday saying that anyone who had tried to buy a bag should contact听MBIE鈥檚 Scamwatch听for advice.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been made aware of Facebook pages pretending to be Queenstown Airport,鈥 said the airport. 鈥淧lease report the pages when you see them.鈥

There were at least 15 adverts bought in the airport鈥檚 name, which were still live as of Monday.

The adverts attracted dozens of comments from apparently 鈥渟atisfied鈥 customers, with photos of what they claimed to be the contents of cases bought in the bogus lost property sale.

Photos of piles of flight cases next to yellow signs bearing Air New Zealand鈥檚 Logo are similar to many copycat scams that appeared earlier this year, targeting Australian and New Zealand travellers.

In January,听Auckland Airport said it was the victim of a similar hoax luggage sale.

At the time, one woman said she ordered a suitcase from the site for $3.19 but it never arrived. A few days later more than $80 was taken from her account. She reported the fraud to her bank to stop further payments.

A similar hoax targeted Sydney Kingsford Smith International Airport with doctored photos of luggage piles, claiming to be a sale from the airport 鈥淟uggage Department鈥.

A baggage scam has been circulating on Facebook.

A baggage scam has been circulating on Facebook.

The $3 luggage hoax听

The Queenstown Airport page, originally created with the name Tajim鈥檚 Media four years ago, changed its name to the airport last month and began posting.

The page鈥檚 owner, a Bangladeshi national, told the听Herald听that they had never even been to Queenstown.

鈥淭hey hacked my page and renamed into Queenstown Airport,鈥 he said but claimed to have no idea about the scam.

This familiar scam has reused photos from other airports.

In a report by AFP earlier this year, many of the doctored 鈥渟ale鈥 photos were identified as having appeared on similar hoax pages targeting Denver Airport.

It appears that the scam targets hacked Facebook pages which were then quickly renamed and used to buy seemingly legitimate adverts via Facebook.

There are at least two hoax Facebook pages claiming to be Queenstown Airport, one previously belonged to a Bangladeshi tech company and another was a Mexican poetry group.

Facebook鈥檚 parent company, Meta were contacted for comment.

This story was originally published on the Herald,

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