I want to talk about persistent accounts where you have ever had a balance and after six months you cashed it out and didnt remove the PayPal Account.
From such accounts where we have already cashed out the balance, we can file a case as unauthorized activity and complain that we didn't withdraw the money and god knows where it went.
PayPal will take the case and start investigating the incident. And pretty soon PayPal will refund the amount to the account balance, which can be drained again.
I opened the case by calling there, as it gives an error when trying to open a case through PayPal's resolution center.
When you call they will ask questions about your activity, you must deny everything!!! Presumably you have not done anything or logged into the account for six months.
Works with a competent caller on absolutely any PP accounts, you don't have to drive them into a 180 day limit at all to do this. You can even send your own money from a relatively clean account to your own self-registration, and then report the fraudulent transaction. A common enough scheme among those operating in the US.
You just need to create a minimal alibi for yourself, change your IP a bit, for example, before withdrawing, while keeping cookies.
From such accounts where we have already cashed out the balance, we can file a case as unauthorized activity and complain that we didn't withdraw the money and god knows where it went.
PayPal will take the case and start investigating the incident. And pretty soon PayPal will refund the amount to the account balance, which can be drained again.
I opened the case by calling there, as it gives an error when trying to open a case through PayPal's resolution center.
When you call they will ask questions about your activity, you must deny everything!!! Presumably you have not done anything or logged into the account for six months.
Works with a competent caller on absolutely any PP accounts, you don't have to drive them into a 180 day limit at all to do this. You can even send your own money from a relatively clean account to your own self-registration, and then report the fraudulent transaction. A common enough scheme among those operating in the US.
You just need to create a minimal alibi for yourself, change your IP a bit, for example, before withdrawing, while keeping cookies.