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iPod fraudster charged

A man in the US has been charged with felony mail fraud and money laundering for allegedly tricking Apple into sending him about 9000 iPod shuffles which he sold online for $US49 each. Nicholas Woodhams ran an iPod repair business, titled “iPod Mechanic,” “iMechanic,” and “Pod Tradeup”, according to Information Week. ย  Apple has filed […]
Patrick Stafford
Patrick Stafford

A man in the US has been charged with felony mail fraud and money laundering for allegedly tricking Apple into sending him about 9000 iPod shuffles which he sold online for $US49 each.

Nicholas Woodhams ran an iPod repair business, titled “iPod Mechanic,” “iMechanic,” and “Pod Tradeup”, according to Information Week.

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Apple has filed a civil fraud lawsuit against Woodhams last year, but the case was delayed due to the Attorney’s Office building an investigation of its own.

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The warranty program for iPod devices allows customers to receive a replacement unit

before the broken unit is returned, and requires a serial number of the original device.

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After a claim by a user is submitted, Apple charges a $1 pre-authorisation fee on a credit card and then ships the repaired unit back, waiting 10 days for the replacement unit to be returned or the card is charged.

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But Woodhams allegedly discovered how the serial numbers were formatted, and used several stored-value Visa cards to submit guessed serial numbers to receive replacement iPod shuffles for units they hadn’t purchased.

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Woodhams then allegedly sold the devices to customers for discount prices, but still managing to make a profit.