This Tiny Scammer Ordered $350 Worth Of Toys On Her Mum’s Amazon And Doesn’t Give A Shit
Hold me closer tiny scammer.
Maybe you’ve been tempted by a similar situation. You’re on a computer and you realise that you’re logged into someone else’s account — maybe it’s their Facebook, or maybe their Amazon profile — and you think of all the havoc you could wreak.
When she sat down in front of a computer with her Mum’s Amazon account open, six-year-old Caitlin did not have time to think. The cheeky little scammer just went for it.
My badass little cousin ordered $300 worth of toys w/o my aunt & uncle knowing. This is a picture of how everyone found out. pic.twitter.com/wHWVhsMBYI
— princess ria (@R_tatas) August 11, 2018
And the first clue Caitlin’s mum got that anything had happened was when the Amazon delivery driver rocked up at her door with $350 worth of games and toys.
Look at her.
She’s so proud of herself too 😂 pic.twitter.com/HoJJCrvASy
— Gem of the Antilles 🇻🇨 (@StaleBakes) August 12, 2018
Caitlin had originally asked her mum whether she could hop on Amazon to check when her Barbie doll would arrive. And, impressively, the young kid knew exactly how to add an item to her shopping basket and check it out.
She did it enough to fill three pages of items — and she had the foresight to choose the one day delivery option, too.
Caitlin’s mum ended up returning all the toys to Amazon, except for the original Barbie doll.
As it turns out, there are a bunch of little tech geniuses running around out there ordering anything from bouncing castles to dishwashing detergent from Amazon:
My son did this during Christmas time a few years ago and I called amazon in tears and they let me keep everything and refunded my money.
— Jessy Fine’Too (@kaballix) August 13, 2018
So he could sleep in the $400 bouncer he ordered. 🤦🏾♀️ pic.twitter.com/OyWiCLXvC1
— Ashley V.💋 (@SuperSaiyan19xx) August 13, 2018
My neighbors 10 year old told Alexa to send him a case of dishwashing soap. We all got some :)
— Joy (@Joyjoysilva) August 13, 2018