FRAUDE MASIVO EN GAS CANALIZADO | En Ocasiones Veo Fraudes #126

00:00 Half a million affected by another massive fraud 05:18 In the latest episode... 03:12 Vito Quiles, denounced by FACUA after registering his new pseudo-media outlet under the name of a non-existent company. 07:40 Solar panel company Social Energy continued offering services despite being in pre-bankruptcy proceedings. 09:28 A website selling flowerpots uses a young man with Down syndrome, generated with AI, as bait. 11:25 Terror at the supermarket: Oranges, Golden Delicious apples, and Conference pears, the basic food items that have increased the most in price in July. 14:19: We help you: We tell you what to do if the hotel asks you to send them a copy of your ID during online check-in. 5:30 PM This could happen to you: They demanded more than 200 euros for a terrible English course: FACUA gets them to refund the 160 euros they had already paid. 8:37 PM Goodbye 9:07 PM The call to manager Sergio Pazos. Episode 126 of Sometimes I See Fraud, the FACUA podcast. In the editorial, Rubén Sánchez talks about the fine imposed on Gas Natural Redes GLP (part of the Naturgy group) following a complaint from FACUA for charging customers with piped LPG gas an extra service without any legal basis. The three current events: we denounce Vito Quiles for registering his new pseudo-media outlet in the name of a non-existent company and soliciting donations that end up in his bank account; the solar panel company Social Energy continued offering services despite being in pre-bankruptcy proceedings; We also denounce the online store MimoStore, which sells flowerpots using an AI-generated young man with Down syndrome as bait. In "Terror at the Supermarket," David Ávila gives you all the details about the price evolution of basic products between June and July of this year. In "We'll Help You," Keka Sánchez tells you what to do if a hotel or tourist accommodation asks for a scanned copy of your ID when checking in online. In "It Could Happen to You," we tell you the story of Manuel, whose money was refused by the English academy Charly's Way, even though the course didn't match the advertisements at all and he had withdrawn from the course in a timely manner.