Scam victim cautions others
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Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- It took just one dewy dawn for her to realize she had been
scammed.
The oil smeared onto her driveway by a phony contractor had washed away,
revealing the pits and scars in the blacktop she had payed him $1,300 to
repair.
“It was just the way it was before,” said Dorothy Adams, 75, who owns and
rents four homes on Ford Road in Costa Mesa. “Maybe worse. And now I have
to pay another contractor to break it all up and do it again.”
Costa Mesa police said similar scams pop onto the scene every few years.
The con men often travel back and forth across the country, preying on
people who need work done on their driveways and roofs and are easily
seduced by a seemingly good deal.
“The line is usually that they just did a job around the block and they
have leftover material,” said George Johnson, a civilian investigator
with the Costa Mesa Police Department. “They say they can cut a really
good deal.”
That’s precisely what a man told Adams three weeks ago, pointing to an
exemplary asphalt job across the street he claimed to have completed. He
told Adams and five homeowners they would get a good deal if they all
hired him.
“I didn’t want to be the one to hold everyone back,” she said.
Adams said she did call the Contractors State License Board to determine
whether the man had credentials. The line was busy. She also called the
owner of the well-paved property to verify the job had indeed been the
same contractor’s handiwork. No answer.
Three days after he swept the driveway, apparently shoveled gravel into
holes and smeared a layer of oil over the asphalt, the contractor was off
with $6,500 paid by the neighbors.
Myrlys Williams, a spokeswoman from the Contractors State License Board,
said Adams should have been skeptical when the paver approached her.
“When you’re not seeking their business and they come to you, you ought
to be concerned,” Williams said.
Williams said Adams was right to try to verify the contractor’s license.
But she said people hiring contractors should check at least three
references, have the contractor sign a written agreement and pay no more
than $1,000 or 10% -- whichever is less -- at the start of the project.
Adams said she learned her lesson. She’s promised to speak up at city
council meetings about the scams and hound investigators to get the word
out.
“You can’t back up,” said Adams, wearing a sundress and a frustrated
frown. “But a woman’s got to stand up for herself.”
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