Vast majority of online puppy ads are fraudulent, report shows

Thousands have already been scammed as officials brace for fake ‘hurricane dogs’

— -- Most online listings for puppies are fraudulent ads from scammers, according to a report released Tuesday by the Better Business Bureau.

The scam has become so widespread – thousands of consumers have been ripped off, with losses estimated in the millions of dollars – that virtually anyone looking for a puppy online is likely to encounter it.

“All the BBBs across the country have recorded this scam on a regular basis and it is increasing,” said Steve Bernas, president and CEO of the Chicago bureau, adding that officials are bracing for expected scams involving “free” homeless pets displaced by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria.

Consumers who fall in love with one of these pets online are asked to first send money for a special shipping crate and transport, and provide other fees for insurance, vaccinations, medicine, food and water. They send the money, but no one sends the puppy.

Buyers who waffle at paying the fees are sometimes told the puppy is already at the airport and if they don’t sent more money for shipping, they will be criminally charged with abandonment of an animal, said Jeni Redmond of the International Pet and Animal Transportation Association.

“They will accuse you of abandoning the pet, but don’t send them any more money,” Redmond said.

Redmond said some of the fake pet sites link to phony transportation websites, some of which lift information from her members’ real sites.

ABC News tried to reach the DeltaPetTransit website operators for comment; the phone number was not functioning and messages left by email and via their website were not returned.

The money is collected by “mules” – co-conspirators who live in the United States – and then sent overseas to the ringleaders, Bernas said. The payments are like cash and are impossible to recoup.

“It’s like opening the window and throwing it out,” Bernas said. “You’ll never get it back.”

Michael Wilborn of suburban Chicago said his daughter nearly paid $650 for a cuddly English bulldog puppy until she did a reverse image search on Google and realized the puppy’s photo was a copy of a Pinterest picture from 2008.

“She had really gotten her hopes up,” he said. “The picture was really cute.”

In addition to doing a reverse image search, experts say avoid sellers who won’t talk on the phone, refuse to allow you to see the dog in person or offer too-good-to-be-true prices.

“If someone is selling an English bulldog for $200, that’s a tip-off right there,” Redmond said.