Elderly Scams Proceed Smoothly Following Mandatory FaceTime Screenings

CELINA, TN — Management at the Celina 52 Truck Stop has adopted a strict new loss prevention policy for senior citizens buying bulk quantities of Steam gift cards. Anyone trying to spend more than five hundred dollars must now hand their phone over to the cashier. The goal is a brief video interview with whatever scammer is demanding the funds. Staff just want to make sure the criminals have pure intentions before they run the register.
The system faced its first test Tuesday afternoon. Local widow Maude Higgins attempted to drop fifteen hundred dollars on digital gaming credits to bail a man claiming to be her grandson out of a fake Mexican jail. Lead Cashier Colby Kappleman temporarily seized her smartphone to interrogate the recipient, an unemployed man named Kenny. "I asked him straight up if he was a PC guy or if he still messed with the PS2," Kappleman said while bagging up the non-refundable cards. "Turns out Kenny is a real hardcore gamer, so I felt completely comfortable letting him drain Maude's checking account."