A man called Evaldas Rimasauskas scammed Facebook and Google out of $122 million by sending fake invoices—which they unknowingly paid.

    by Separate_Finance_183

    30 Comments

    1. Heedlessly, not unknowingly.

      As in.

      They knew they were paying them.

      They just didn’t pay attention to the payments.

    2. IKillZombies4Cash on

      Would it have been illegal if the invoice stated in the item description it was a fake invoice and paying it would be considered a charitable donation?

    3. CapitalWestern4779 on

      Let Benicio DiCaprio alone, he deserved that money way more than google and company.

    4. RiseDelicious3556 on

      Personally, I would have stopped after a few million and would now be living in the South of France next door to George Clooney.

    5. so after the first 5-10 million$, it never crossed his mind to think “ok maybe I’m good”?

      greed is so often one’s downfall

    6. Raytheon_Nublinski on

      That’s like finding a penny on the sidewalk to those corporations

      Let that man go

    7. Sugary_Plumbs on

      You can give anyone an invoice for anything as long as you do deliver *something*. Piece of trash, rubber duck, whatever. If they pay for the box, that’s on them for being dumb. You only get in trouble for the times you charge for nothing, since that’s fraud.

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