Monthly Archives: October 2009

Happy Halloween – Be Careful

Don’t forget about the Time Change on Sunday, November 1. Set your clocks back one hour–the change officially starts at 2:00am on November 1. The majority of the United States observes daylight time, but there are some exceptions, including Hawaii and most of Arizona.

If your kids are going trick-or-treating, check out some Halloween Safety tips. They include:

*

Ensuring that your child’s costume is flame-resistant.
*

Accompanying young children and ensuring that all children walk along sidewalks.
*

Instructing children not to enter homes.
*

Examining all candy before your child eats it.

Have a safe and happy Halloween!

CASH GIFTING in the News …

GIFTING IN-THE-NEWS
& SOME EXTERNAL LINKS TO OTHER REPORTS

Better Business Bureau – Central OK: Pyramid Scheme Surfaces In Oklahoma, Other Parts of the Country. The Better Business Bureau of Oklahoma City warns of a program that is apparently an illegal pyramid scheme that is being promoted in several areas of the country. The operation called “Webco” is supposedly based in Calera, a small town in the southern part of Oklahoma.

Danville, VA – Attorney General - Accordingly, it is my opinion that every person who participates in the “gifting program” by paying $2,000, with the expectation of advancing and ultimately receiving $16,000, is guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor for operating a pyramid promotional scheme, in violation of § 18.2-239. 1Punishment for conviction of a Class 1 misdemeanor is “confinement in jail for not more than twelve months and a fine of not more than $2,500, either or both.” Section 18.2-11.

Idaho – Attorney General Warns Of Dinner Party Pyramid Scheme – The scheme, which is known by the names Circle of Friends, Women Helping Women, Women Empowering Women, Women for Women, and the Dinner Party, is represented as a gathering of women helping one an

Iowa Attorney General – Issue Warning
Attorney General’s Office Issues Warning: Avoid Illegal Pyramid – The Consumer Protection Division of the Iowa Attorney General’s Office issued the following statement today in response to numerous inquiries about a pyramid program that is operating in certain areas of Iowa.

Leave This Gift Unopened ABC News – ‘Gifting Clubs’ Just as Devious and Risky as Pyramid Schemes. Though they may use catchy terms and incentives, “gifting clubs” are almost a sure way to lose money. (Jim Boyle/ABCNEWS.com)

North County (NY) – NORTH COUNTY PYRAMID SCHEME RESULTS IN $100,000 IN FINES. A.G. Warns Consumers Against “Gifting Circle” Scam. Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said today that twelve North Country women have paid substantial penalties for their roles as leaders of an illegal pyramid scheme.   The Attorney General began investigating the pyramid scheme, commonly known as the “Women’s Gifting Circle” or “Women’s Gifting Tree,” in late 2000 after receiving numerous calls concerning the enterprise. Most of the calls came from anxious women who had lost substantial sums of money in the scheme.


Savannah GA  – Community leaders named in pyramid scheme. SAVANNAH – Their names are well known in the community. Police say that credibility led others to believe a pyramid scheme to make money was legal.

Sonoma County (CA) – District Attoryney – The District Attorney’s Office Warns Women Of Pyramid Scheme – The district attorney’s office today warns women in Sonoma County not to fall prey to the “empowering” techniques used by a new Pyramid scheme in the County of Sonoma. Pyramid participation in our state is against the law, and may result in criminal or civil penalties.

St.Paul, MN – Pyramid Scheme Flyer & TipsMinnesota law prohibits all pyramid schemes because they deceive and cheat people. But promoters continue to hype pyramid schemes and recruit new people. con artists running the scams are looking for people who are vulnerable to get-rich-quick promises.

Towns Get Wrapped Up in Pyramid ‘Gifting’ Schemes – THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE SERVICE – CANTON, Ill. — For more than two weeks, day and night, neighbors and relatives hurried to Doug and Susan Manock’s house with $2,000 in hand.

This is dedicated to Stopping Pyramid Scams, Gifting Clubs, Gifting Scams, demonstrating that Gifting programs can put people in jail, State Attorney Generals jail and fine people, Pyramid scams never work, District Attorneys prosocut Pyramid gifting scams.

Buyer Beware —- Until Next Time …

—- Bob Lee


Cash Gifting – Newest Fad (Fraud …)

Cash Gifting Program Types

Sat, Aug 9, 2008

Cash Gifting Basics

The second article in our Cash Gifting Basics series briefly explores the two primary types of cash gifting programs.

Do ads like this look familiar?

“Discover the top cash gifting program– guaranteed and proven results!”

“Automatic cash gifting-let us do all the work. Make money doing nothing!”

“Cash gifting with integrity!”

These are just a few ads typical of cash gifting programs, which are presented as legal money making opportunities based on the IRS Tax Code, which allows anyone to give individual cash gifts of up to $12,000 per calendar year to any number of individuals.

Cash gifting programs promise enormous returns while claiming to operate within the letter of the law. They reach out to potential members in a variety of ways, but all of them have the same goal: to create a pyramid structure of cash giving individuals, with the “gifts” of those joining being funneled directly to the members at the top.

The members at the top of the pyramid, once they have been paid their promised reward, are free to leave the program. If they remain, they must start over at the bottom. The members at the base then move up one level and wait for enough new members to join to push them to the top where they to will receive their promised reward.

Cash gifting programs, in other words, are nothing more than recruitment schemes. Most of them offer no tangible product or service. In order to avoid being tagged as illegal pyramid schemes, many cash gifting program operators have come up with program structures designed to give them an air of legitimacy.

The One-Up Cash Gifting Program

Promoters of one-up cash gifting separate their programs from others by saying that these programs are structured to avoid the pyramid label. These programs rely instead on “receiving lines.”

So, what are receiving lines? Member A gets a phone call from someone who wants to join the program. This person joins as Member B, becoming Member A’s receiving line, and sending Member A the stipulated amount of cash. Member B is then free to start taking phone calls from other potential members.

Member B persuades Member C to join. Member C’s money goes to Member A, and Member B is removed from Member A’s receiving line, and free to start his or her own.

Member C recruits Member D, who sends money to Member A and remains in Member A’s receiving line while Member C is free to start receiving lines.

Each person who joins under Member A’s receiving line must give Member A both his cash gift, and the first cash gift generated by his own receiving line. That’s his own money, and the money from the first person recruited by his each of his recruits.

One of the best-known of these systems allows new members to join at different levels of participation according to what they can afford – $500, $1,500, $2,000, or $3,500 (if they want their receiving lines to cover new members at all levels). What this means is that a person’s receiving line will be limited to members at their level or lower, until that person upgrades by making a bigger “gift.”

That is, of course, unless someone can afford the $3500 up front. Anyone who can is entitled to go after all newcomers, including those who were the only hope members at lower levels had of breaking even or profiting.

The promoters of this system overlook that particular aspect, concentrating instead on the fact that no receiving line ever has more than one new recruit paying one existing member, so there is no resemblance to a pyramid scheme.

Each person Member A directly recruits becomes another potential receiving line. The promoters of one-up cash gifting systems claim that because millions of people are phoning system members each day to find out how to join, existing members will have no difficulty getting their first recruits. The regular spin is that they will usually have multiple recruits within two or three days.

A response in the millions, however, would require a massive promotional effort, which also costs money. So, if the only money going into the program is being passed from member to member, how are the promotions paid for? You guessed it – membership fees.

Or, they’re paid for by the members themselves, who have to do some old-fashioned cold calling, using scripts provided by the program “mentors,” advertising, or list buying in order to generate new leads. One of the more popular of these programs offers its members a daily “training” call, which is often more of a pep talk than an actual learning experience, and weekly “overview” calls.

This program, however, doesn’t allow its members to use the Internet as a promotional medium. That alone sets it apart from many of its competitors.

Once the members have found some genuine leads, they invite those people to participate in the program’s weekly conference calls, during which they’ll be officially invited to participate.

Some one-up systems also offer software tracking systems administered by third parties so that, for a fee, members can keep current on their receiving lines and income. The normal cost of these systems is between $100 and $130 per year.

Another of these programs provides its potential members with a free e-book containing seven of the program’s methods for getting new members (including setting up a website, using Google pay-per-click ads, and buying $625 worth of advertising postcards sent by an automated system to names on a home business prospects list).

Anyone getting money from this system would be smart to set part of it aside to cover the ongoing costs of finding new recruits.

Multi-Level Cash Gifting Programs

The differences between one-up cash gifting and multi-level cash giving programs are more than structural; they have very dissimilar approaches to recruiting. Most multi-level programs have existing members known as “presenters” arrange invitation-only gatherings, at which they make their pitch for new members.

These cash gifting programs operate like traditional MLMs (Tupperware or Oxyfresh, for example) except that they offer neither products nor services. Many of them are gender specific, attracting women by offering them financial empowerment, or men by sales pitches liberally sprinkled with masculine metaphors.

One cash gifting club used an airplane theme, with newly recruited members buying on as passengers at $1,500 per head. When all the “seats” on the plane were full, the passengers were upgraded to “pilots” and only then could they begin recruiting new passengers, with the chance to earn $12,000 if they filled their own planes with the required eight recruits.

Cash gifting “dinner clubs” set up dinner parties for recruits, aiming to get eight new participants (”appetizers”) putting up $5,000 each at a party for the person at the top level (”dessert”) of the club, who will get $40,000. The two levels in between the appetizers and the dessert are called the soup and salad (four members) and entrees (two members).

When the dessert receives her $40,000, which comes via FedEx or UPS, and is often wrapped as a birthday gift, the remaining tiers are split into two new “tables” and the members of each go in search of eight new “appetizers.”

The late-comers to the dinner party, however, are in danger on encountering famine instead of feast. Why? Because any tiered cash gifting club eventually exhausts the available pool of new members. Authorities at all levels estimate that only one in ten participants in a cash gifting club reach the top level and get paid.

Special Thanks to the CashGifting Watchdog who provide such useful info..

Was this article helpful? If so, share it with a friend and get this out to as many people you can.  Thanx

Bob Lee

School Resources You Need …

Become a Teacher …

–US Dept of Education has a bunch of info on tools & resources to help you in your quest.

–Plus, the DOE has a bunch of info on other stuff to – all related to education.

— Write me or comment at the end of this post on what you’d like to see so you don’t have to spend countless hours at their site.  I’ll do my best to get it out for you.

Until next time … keep learning.

—–Bob Lee

roblee59@optonline.net

MONEY money money ….

Use this Now -  Read the Money Fraud Alerts — They’re real & the info – well, … its amazing

Write me, eme, tweet your friends , SPREAD THE WORD – – you’ll be glad you did & so will everyone you contact.

Until Next Time — Live profitably

—- Bob Lee

Gift Giving Updates … Is it really true??

Cash Gifting Explained

Sun, Aug 10, 2008

Cash Gifting Basics

Bypassing the hype and getting the facts about cash gifting can be hard. The first article in our Cash Gifting Basics series briefly explores the background and operation of cash gifting programs.

What does “cash gifting” mean?

If you’re at an age where estate planning has become a concern, you’ve undoubtedly been told about “cash gifting” by your accountant or attorney. Gifting has been an acceptable form of wealth sharing for centuries, and is in fact approved by the IRS under Tax Code Title 26, Sections 2501-2504 and 2511.

Cash gifting has been used legitimately as a means to reduce the size of your estate, and the estate tax burden on your heirs. You’re allowed to gift as many individuals as you like up to $12,000 each within a calendar year, and those people will not have to declare or pay tax on that money.

But, like any good thing, there’s a catch – if your cash gift is to qualify under IRS regulations, it must be given with no strings attached. You can’t get anything in return from the gift’s recipient. It is this restriction which has given rise to the many creative ways in which cash gifting programs have tried to separate themselves from elaborate Ponzi schemes.

What’s a Ponzi scheme, and how do they apply to cash gifting?

Named for Charles Ponzi, Ponzi schemes promise impossibly high investment returns in unrealistically short periods, and rely on those promises to keep new investors coming. It’s the money from the new investors which is used to pay most of the remarkable returns to the earlier ones, because Ponzi schemes almost never have any additional sources of income.

As more investors join a Ponzi scheme, more money is needed to pay them, and the scheme will eventually collapse when the amount of money it owes eclipses the amount of money coming in. The scheme’s most recent investors will lose the most because their investments have been used to pay earlier investors.

Many cash gifting programs trying to avoid a Ponzi label have steered clear of calling themselves investments. Investments fall under SEC regulations and those suspected of being fraudulent can be shut down. There are criminal penalties for those who engage in illegal investment activities.

Cash gifting programs will also avoid calling themselves business opportunities, because that name implies the existence of a contract between a buyer and a seller, for goods or services and would be regulated by state laws.

So how do cash gifting programs work?

Most cash gifting programs have “systems” requiring membership fees to cover their operational costs, which include promotion. Anyone joining one of these programs will receive money, but only from the people he or she persuades to join later.

You can’t enroll in a cash gifting program without agreeing to give a specific amount of cash to someone else. For your enrollment and monthly membership fees, you’ll receive a private member number which tracks the amounts of the gifts you give and receive. The most sophisticated cash gifting programs will supply documents detailing their members’ cash transfers.

The biggest cash gifting programs teach their members a marketing system for attracting new members, without whom the entire system would collapse. This is the Ponzi aspect of cash gifting schemes.

Why do cash gifting programs eventually fail?

If members fail at marketing the programs to an ever-widening base of new members, then the pool of money being “gifted” among the existing members will dry up.

Cash gifting clubs promote themselves at invitation only gatherings similar to Tupperware parties, except that no product is being sold.

All those invited are there because an existing member of the program thinks they have money available to participate and will risk giving it to a complete stranger for the chance to have several complete strangers the same amount of money to them, multiplying their money (again, it’s never called an “investment”).

The “presenters” at cash gifting program gatherings give chalkboard or Power Point presentations which invariably end up with an image of a pyramid, showing how each member will make his or her way from the base to the top, where they will get the big payoff.

The money contributed by an incoming member goes to the top of the pyramid immediately, while the penniless member sits at the base of the pyramid until enough other members join to completely pay off the member at the top and move everyone else up a notch. Once a member is paid off, he or she is free to move on, but for a club to keep working, the money given to that member will have to be replaced from somewhere.

If, for example, the promised payout of a cash gifting club is $20,000, and the gift required is $2,500, only eight new members must be recruited to pay off one old member.

But what happens when a club reaches 100 members? If each of them is to get the full $20,000, for a total of $2,000,000, then 800 people must join. If each of them is to be paid, 6,400 must join. With each new level, the numbers grow more unrealistic.

For this example club, with its relatively low gifting and payout levels of $2,500 and $20,000, to continue for only two cycles after it gets its 100th member, 51,200 members must join.

Many clubs count on their paid off members to keep returning. Even if they all do, it is mathematically impossible for a cash gifting club to survive without an exponentially increasing membership base.

When the pool of new members dries up, so do the cash gifts, and any members who joined too late are out of luck – not to mention money.

Special Thanks to the CashGifting Watchdog who provide such useful info.

Until Next Time … Stay Informed

—Bob Lee

Gift Giving & MONEY MONEY MONEY Putting Money in Your Bank Acct

Hey Everyone -

This is Thee No-Nonsense Practical Way to build your cash reserves legally …

Most of you know that I’m into getting the facts out to you whether it involves, health, government, savings and especially Money!!!

This is a widely used tool used by Charitable Organizations and other wealthy individuals.

This can be used at different levels & is a super tool that has individuals from all over the country & now it’s entered international status that’s recognized by IRS code.

Take the time to inquire about this. It’s definitely worth the time.

Until Next Time … Live Life to the Fullest.

—– Bob Lee

Eggs – Storage Chart

Egg Storage Chart

Product

Refrigerator

Freezer


Raw eggs in shell

3 to 5 weeks

Do not freeze. Instead, beat yolks and whites together; then freeze.

 

Raw egg whites

2 to 4 days

12 months

 

Raw egg yolks

2 to 4 days

Yolks do not freeze well.

 

Raw egg accidentally frozen in shell

Use immediately after thawing.

Keep frozen; then
refrigerate to thaw.

 

Hard-cooked eggs

1 week

Do not freeze.

 

Egg substitutes, liquid
Unopened

10 days

12 months

 

Egg substitutes, liquid
Opened

3 days

Do not freeze.

 

Egg substitutes, frozen
Unopened

After thawing, 7 days or refer to “Use-By” date.

12 months

 

Egg substitutes, frozen
Opened

After thawing, 3 days or refer to “Use-By” date.

Do not freeze.

 

Casseroles with eggs

3 to 4 days

After baking, 2 to 3 months.

 

Eggnog
Commercial

3 to 5 days

6 months

 

Eggnog
Homemade

2 to 4 days

Do not freeze.

 

Pies
Pumpkin or pecan

3 to 4 days

After baking, 1 to 2 months.

 

Pies
Custard and chiffon

3 to 4 days

Do not freeze.

 

Quiche with filling

3 to 4 days

After baking, 1 to 2 months.

 

Eggs and Egg Products

Eggs are one of nature’s most nutritious and economical foods.  But, you must take special care with handling and preparing fresh eggs and egg products to avoid food poisoning.

Egg Recipes: Playing It Safe

  • Egg mixtures are safe if they reach 160 °F.
  • Homemade ice cream and eggnog are safe if made from  a cooked egg-milk mixture. Heat it gently and use a food thermometer to ensure that it reaches 160 °F.
  • Dry meringue shells, divinity candy, and 7-minute frosting are safe — these are made by combining hot sugar syrup with beaten egg whites. However, avoid icing         recipes using uncooked eggs or egg whites.
  • Meringue-topped pies should be safe if baked at 350 °F for about 15 minutes.
  • But avoid chiffon pies and fruit whips made with raw, beaten egg whites — instead, substitute pasteurized dried egg whites, whipped cream, or a whipped topping.
  • Adapting Recipes: If your recipe calls for uncooked eggs, make it safe by heating the eggs in one of the recipe’s other liquid ingredients over low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture reaches 160 °F. Then, combine it with the other ingredients and complete the recipe.
  • Use a Food Thermometer: To determine safety in egg dishes such as quiche and casseroles, the center of the mixture should reach 160 °F when measured with a food thermometer.

General Information

Egg Products and Food Safety (USDA)
How to use liquid, frozen, and dried egg products safely.

Shell Eggs from Farm to Table (USDA)
Answers to questions on eggs, from how often a hen lays an egg to the safety of Easter eggs to egg storage guidelines.

Until Next Time … Stay Healthy

——-  I’m Bob Lee

Did you know …

ALERTS & NEWS …

Affy Tapple, LLC, a Niles, Ill. firm, is voluntarily recalling its “Limited Edition – Classic Candy Flavors” two-pack caramel apples because the label did not include the allergen statement “manufactured on shared equipment with peanuts and tree nuts”. Consumers who have an allergy to peanuts may run the risk of a serious allergic reaction if they consume product containing such ingredients.

Consumers should immediately stop taking any product that claims to contain steroids or steroid-like substances…

Items scheduled on the block for the next U.S. Department of Treasury public auction have now been posted. The sale will be held on November 4, 2009

  1. 40 Rolex Watches
  2. 20 Luxury Watches and other Fine Jewelry
  3. TV’s and Electronics
  4. 1981 Cessna 182R Skyline Aircraft
  5. Boats and Fishing Equipment
  6. 1986 Ford Mustang Drag Racing Chassis
  7. iPods and Laptop Computers

Check back often as over 100 new pieces of jewelry will be added later this week.

Until Next Time … Stay Healthy

—-I’m Bob Lee

Jobs … Money (Time Sensitive)

Hey Everyone,

Just wanted to throw this out there.

Job Openings.

  • The CDC is seeking exceptional candidates to serve in various leadership roles throughout the agency. For more information on available positions, Click Here:  Job Openings page.

Until Next Time …

——- Bob Lee