Is it possible to buy round-trip tickets to Jamaica where the return ticket is counterfeit?











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My daughter in law says shes now stranded there. Is this possible?










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  • Do you know for a fact that she is actually there?
    – njzk2
    19 mins ago















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My daughter in law says shes now stranded there. Is this possible?










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    Welcome to travel.stackexchange!
    – ajd
    5 hours ago










  • Do you know for a fact that she is actually there?
    – njzk2
    19 mins ago













up vote
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My daughter in law says shes now stranded there. Is this possible?










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My daughter in law says shes now stranded there. Is this possible?







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edited 31 mins ago









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asked 7 hours ago









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  • 2




    Welcome to travel.stackexchange!
    – ajd
    5 hours ago










  • Do you know for a fact that she is actually there?
    – njzk2
    19 mins ago














  • 2




    Welcome to travel.stackexchange!
    – ajd
    5 hours ago










  • Do you know for a fact that she is actually there?
    – njzk2
    19 mins ago








2




2




Welcome to travel.stackexchange!
– ajd
5 hours ago




Welcome to travel.stackexchange!
– ajd
5 hours ago












Do you know for a fact that she is actually there?
– njzk2
19 mins ago




Do you know for a fact that she is actually there?
– njzk2
19 mins ago










2 Answers
2






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oldest

votes

















up vote
22
down vote













Anything is possible, of course, but it is overwhelmingly, vastly, immensely more likely that this is a scam, and that the source of this email or message is not actually your daughter-in-law, but instead someone else trying to get you to send them money.



In this day of easy Facetime and other video connections, you'll want to have an actual chat with your daughter-in-law to make sure it's her and she's really in need. This SE thread and this ABC News story discuss the issue further.






share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
    – jcaron
    5 hours ago






  • 4




    Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
    – jcaron
    5 hours ago






  • 7




    It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    5 hours ago










  • @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
    – Sean
    54 mins ago


















up vote
0
down vote













Anything is possible. It's however highly unlikely, certainly if she bought the ticket through an airline or a reputable travel agency.



Most likely then, it's a scam and the email is not coming from your daughter in law but from someone else entirely. Which should be easy enough to check by comparing the email addresses of the sender, reply-to address, and any known email addresses of your daughter in law. She should also have other means of contacting you, like telephone, to verify whether the message was indeed sent by her.



The text of the message is also a clue, does it mention actual correct names and addresses? If not, it's a dead giveaway that it's a scam. If it does, are they correct? If they are, it can still be a scam especially if your and her name are relatively common.



So contact her through other means, verify that it really is coming from her (99% chance it isn't btw, especially if you didn't know before getting this message that she's in Jamaica, most people wouldn't go abroad without telling their family after all. And if they get in trouble while abroad would call their direct family first rather than their in-laws).





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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    22
    down vote













    Anything is possible, of course, but it is overwhelmingly, vastly, immensely more likely that this is a scam, and that the source of this email or message is not actually your daughter-in-law, but instead someone else trying to get you to send them money.



    In this day of easy Facetime and other video connections, you'll want to have an actual chat with your daughter-in-law to make sure it's her and she's really in need. This SE thread and this ABC News story discuss the issue further.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 4




      Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 7




      It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      5 hours ago










    • @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
      – Sean
      54 mins ago















    up vote
    22
    down vote













    Anything is possible, of course, but it is overwhelmingly, vastly, immensely more likely that this is a scam, and that the source of this email or message is not actually your daughter-in-law, but instead someone else trying to get you to send them money.



    In this day of easy Facetime and other video connections, you'll want to have an actual chat with your daughter-in-law to make sure it's her and she's really in need. This SE thread and this ABC News story discuss the issue further.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 4




      Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 7




      It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      5 hours ago










    • @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
      – Sean
      54 mins ago













    up vote
    22
    down vote










    up vote
    22
    down vote









    Anything is possible, of course, but it is overwhelmingly, vastly, immensely more likely that this is a scam, and that the source of this email or message is not actually your daughter-in-law, but instead someone else trying to get you to send them money.



    In this day of easy Facetime and other video connections, you'll want to have an actual chat with your daughter-in-law to make sure it's her and she's really in need. This SE thread and this ABC News story discuss the issue further.






    share|improve this answer












    Anything is possible, of course, but it is overwhelmingly, vastly, immensely more likely that this is a scam, and that the source of this email or message is not actually your daughter-in-law, but instead someone else trying to get you to send them money.



    In this day of easy Facetime and other video connections, you'll want to have an actual chat with your daughter-in-law to make sure it's her and she's really in need. This SE thread and this ABC News story discuss the issue further.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 6 hours ago









    David

    1,276213




    1,276213








    • 6




      Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 4




      Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 7




      It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      5 hours ago










    • @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
      – Sean
      54 mins ago














    • 6




      Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 4




      Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
      – jcaron
      5 hours ago






    • 7




      It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      5 hours ago










    • @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
      – Sean
      54 mins ago








    6




    6




    Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
    – jcaron
    5 hours ago




    Or it could be the daughter in law just wanting to get an extended vacation of course :-)
    – jcaron
    5 hours ago




    4




    4




    Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
    – jcaron
    5 hours ago




    Note that there are no paper tickets anymore. All tickets are e-tickets nowadays, and the booking can usually be easily checked online using the booking reference and last name (at least on the airline’s website). If the outbound leg was legit, so will the return. There could be cases of overbooking, but the airline will definitely not let a passenger in this situation “stranded”.
    – jcaron
    5 hours ago




    7




    7




    It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    5 hours ago




    It could be her daughter in law scamming her too.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    5 hours ago












    @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
    – Sean
    54 mins ago




    @jcaron: Most tickets, yes, but certainly not all.
    – Sean
    54 mins ago












    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Anything is possible. It's however highly unlikely, certainly if she bought the ticket through an airline or a reputable travel agency.



    Most likely then, it's a scam and the email is not coming from your daughter in law but from someone else entirely. Which should be easy enough to check by comparing the email addresses of the sender, reply-to address, and any known email addresses of your daughter in law. She should also have other means of contacting you, like telephone, to verify whether the message was indeed sent by her.



    The text of the message is also a clue, does it mention actual correct names and addresses? If not, it's a dead giveaway that it's a scam. If it does, are they correct? If they are, it can still be a scam especially if your and her name are relatively common.



    So contact her through other means, verify that it really is coming from her (99% chance it isn't btw, especially if you didn't know before getting this message that she's in Jamaica, most people wouldn't go abroad without telling their family after all. And if they get in trouble while abroad would call their direct family first rather than their in-laws).





    share

























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Anything is possible. It's however highly unlikely, certainly if she bought the ticket through an airline or a reputable travel agency.



      Most likely then, it's a scam and the email is not coming from your daughter in law but from someone else entirely. Which should be easy enough to check by comparing the email addresses of the sender, reply-to address, and any known email addresses of your daughter in law. She should also have other means of contacting you, like telephone, to verify whether the message was indeed sent by her.



      The text of the message is also a clue, does it mention actual correct names and addresses? If not, it's a dead giveaway that it's a scam. If it does, are they correct? If they are, it can still be a scam especially if your and her name are relatively common.



      So contact her through other means, verify that it really is coming from her (99% chance it isn't btw, especially if you didn't know before getting this message that she's in Jamaica, most people wouldn't go abroad without telling their family after all. And if they get in trouble while abroad would call their direct family first rather than their in-laws).





      share























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        Anything is possible. It's however highly unlikely, certainly if she bought the ticket through an airline or a reputable travel agency.



        Most likely then, it's a scam and the email is not coming from your daughter in law but from someone else entirely. Which should be easy enough to check by comparing the email addresses of the sender, reply-to address, and any known email addresses of your daughter in law. She should also have other means of contacting you, like telephone, to verify whether the message was indeed sent by her.



        The text of the message is also a clue, does it mention actual correct names and addresses? If not, it's a dead giveaway that it's a scam. If it does, are they correct? If they are, it can still be a scam especially if your and her name are relatively common.



        So contact her through other means, verify that it really is coming from her (99% chance it isn't btw, especially if you didn't know before getting this message that she's in Jamaica, most people wouldn't go abroad without telling their family after all. And if they get in trouble while abroad would call their direct family first rather than their in-laws).





        share












        Anything is possible. It's however highly unlikely, certainly if she bought the ticket through an airline or a reputable travel agency.



        Most likely then, it's a scam and the email is not coming from your daughter in law but from someone else entirely. Which should be easy enough to check by comparing the email addresses of the sender, reply-to address, and any known email addresses of your daughter in law. She should also have other means of contacting you, like telephone, to verify whether the message was indeed sent by her.



        The text of the message is also a clue, does it mention actual correct names and addresses? If not, it's a dead giveaway that it's a scam. If it does, are they correct? If they are, it can still be a scam especially if your and her name are relatively common.



        So contact her through other means, verify that it really is coming from her (99% chance it isn't btw, especially if you didn't know before getting this message that she's in Jamaica, most people wouldn't go abroad without telling their family after all. And if they get in trouble while abroad would call their direct family first rather than their in-laws).






        share











        share


        share










        answered 1 min ago









        jwenting

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