LuckyLuke
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- May 17, 2024
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The story sounds very fake to me. First of all the Point of Sale system here doesn't allow them to charge dollars. So it would be a peso amount equivalent to $30,000. Were talking a charge of $42,000,000 pesos. I strongly doubt any card would just approve a foreign charge of that size without making a call. In addition they talk of not having a receipt as if the purchaser has the onus of proving the charge. That's false, the credit card company requires the vendor prove the charge is valid with a signed receipt. How on earth was the restaurant able to provide a $42,000,000 signed receipt? Ridiculous article that was likely written by AI to promote some credit protection service.Like a bridge over troubled water I laid me down to a well deserved siesta, but the second my head hit the pillow, my brain at last started to work.
Who has a credit card with a limit of US$ 30,000 a day - or more?
Only people who are so wealthy, that they wouldn't notice if they had paid US$29,695 for a pair of gloves or a meal, have a CC limit of that size.
For this person a few thousand dollars would absolutely not "kick off a six-month financial nightmare",
For any average person the alarm bell would sound very loud in their bank or credit card company, screaming scam! scam! scam!
I smell a rat - or rather a fairy tale.