The door-to-door Seattle scam that isn’t always illegal
Jul 26, 2016, 6:44 AM | Updated: 7:48 am

Scammers will sometimes go door-to-door in Seattle and con residents out of money with a tale of woe. (Ed Ivanuskin, Flickr)
(Ed Ivanuskin, Flickr)
Scam artists generally don’t announce their presence, especially when going door-to-door in Seattle. It’s why Seattle residents get conned into handing out cash to someone with a tale of woe.
It happened recently in Wallingford where a man knocked on a door and asked for help. And like it or not, the practice — while very dishonest — isn’t exactly illegal.
The Wallyhood blog recently reported:
I wanted to let you know about a scam that I fell for the other day. We live in a triplex on the corner of North 38th Street and Wallingford Avenue North. About 8pm our buzzer rang鈥 I went to the door. A man who identified himself as Joseph was standing there. He gave me a very detailed story about how he and his partner had just moved into 鈥渢hat house just up the street.鈥 He pointed north on Wallingford. Joseph went on to say that he had just gotten a job at the University of Washington as a janitor because his boyfriend鈥檚 father knows the president of the university.
He had locked himself out and he was $12 short of being able to pay the locksmith to get him in because his wallet was locked inside. I asked him why the locksmith couldn鈥檛 let him in to get the wallet, but he just interrupted me to say the police officer that was on the scene said that legally he could not loan him any money in order to get into his house.
So we gave him $20鈥 he left claiming that he would bring back the change鈥 of course, never saw him again.
I figure the elaborate story told with such conviction and energy was worth the $20!!
Joseph is a tall, thin, well dressed African-American man. He mentioned that he was gay several times in the conversation鈥 as I said, lots of energy/agitation as he told the story.
One thing to note about this story, according to Sergeant Sean Whitcomb with the Seattle Police Department, is it鈥檚 unlikely that a police officer will spend their time on a resident locked out of their home.
鈥淎t best, there are some officers who can help you get into a car built in the 鈥70s,鈥 Whitcomb said. 鈥淭he fact of the matter is, it鈥檚 not really a police issue. We are not going to respond to a lockout where someone can鈥檛 get into a residence. There are locksmiths for that purpose.”
A Seattle scam with history
The story is common around Seattle. Like the Bigfoot of cons, the locksmith scam is sighted every so often then disappears, leaving stories with similar details: UW, janitor, partner, locked out and needing money.
While Whitcomb hasn’t come across this specific locksmith scam, Seattleites have been for years. Looking back on neighborhood blogs, one can find a string of tales, all using similar details.
There’s this in which a person encountered the scam twice, two years apart. Then there’s this and . Green Lake reportedly got hit with it, and so did . also hasn’t been spared.
And while Whitcomb hasn’t personally dealt with this particular locksmith scam, he’s still familiar with the basics.
“That鈥檚 just a variation on a number of different scams which is: Hey there, I鈥檓 down on my luck, and I鈥檓 a really nice guy, and just a few bucks would get me what I need then you鈥檒l never see me again. Could you be helpful and neighborly? Thanks,鈥 Whitcomb said as an example. “Essentially, that’s what this was.”
“The temptation is to be a good neighbor,” he said. “But let鈥檚 remember that this sounds eerily similar to the 鈥榊eah, I鈥檓 headed to Tacoma and I鈥檓 out of gas and a few bucks short with a car full of kids, and I never beg and I鈥檓 really embarrassed to ask. Could you help me out?’ And people dig deep into the goodness of their hearts, but sadly that is typically a scam.”
Gambling with charity
While the locksmith scam, and similar cons, are dishonest, it’s not necessarily illegal.
鈥淭his is typically not criminal,” Whitcomb said. “It would be criminal if someone is selling you something and you don鈥檛 receive it. If someone is asking you to give them something in a pinch — it may be true or not true — but if you are providing monetary support, it鈥檚 important to understand that it is being given by you by choice … If you think someone has been deceptive, and you are frustrated, then learn from that lesson.”
“And it depends if the person is aggressive with you 鈥 intimidating and threatening 鈥 that is a police issue,” Whitcomb added. “If the person is making a simple request, and you are choosing to support them, that is your personal issue and not a police matter — whether or not the story is true or not. You鈥檙e being tricked, but not really defrauded.”
Whitcomb’s advice, if you suspect that anything is not on the up-and-up, say you have no cash and move along.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 OK to give money to people, but when you do that you have to understand that it is a possibility that his story is a fabrication,” he said. “If you can live with that — the idea that the money you are giving may not necessarily go to what they say it is going to — by all means feel free. But if you are skeptical, the best advice is to say, ‘Sorry, I can鈥檛 help you. I don鈥檛 carry cash.'”