You think you scored a deal when you hand over $70 to a kid at school, but the glossy case and glowing logo turn out to be nothing more than convincing fakes. If you want to know what to do next—how to get your money back, avoid being duped again, and handle a seller who bragged “This is why my family is rich and yours isn’t”—start with documenting the sale and staying calm when you confront them.

He felt embarrassed and angry when the truth came out, and the seller’s smug reaction made it worse. The article walks through the hassle of buying AirPods on campus, the confrontation and its awkward fallout, and practical steps to protect yourself and others from the same scam.
Buying AirPods at School: The Experience
He expected a quick transaction and a better pair of earphones than his cracked wired ones; instead he got a lesson in street-level scams and high-school status economics. The next paragraphs describe the buying moment, the clues that tipped him off, and how he reacted when confronted.
Making the Purchase for $70
He saw the kid in the cafeteria between classes, holding a small white case and offering a “deal” on AirPods for $70. The kid sounded confident, said they were lightly used, and showed the case closed; it looked polished under the fluorescent lights. Payment was cash—no receipts, no serial number check—so the exchange took thirty seconds. Class was starting, so pressure to finish fast made him skip a thorough inspection.
After the handoff he noticed the hinge felt loose and the case didn’t have the weight of a genuine Apple product. The kid shrugged and said other students had bought them before. He left the campus store thinking he’d scored something solid for cheap.
How I Realized the AirPods Were Fake
At the bus stop he opened the case to pair them; the phone didn’t show the familiar AirPods animation. The white earbuds clicked into the case but the LED color and pairing behavior were off. Sound quality was tinny with weak bass, and noise cancellation—if any—sounded like muffling from cheap foam.
He checked for an Apple serial under the lid and on the original box the kid had—none matched Apple’s lookup. The charging cable port felt generic and the silicone tips weren’t a design Apple sells. Each inconsistency summed to a clear conclusion: these were counterfeit.
My Reaction After Discovering the Truth
He texted the seller immediately and asked for a refund; the kid replied with a laughing GIF and the line, “This is why my family is rich and yours isn’t.” That reply flipped his frustration into disbelief. He felt embarrassed for not checking, angry about being lied to, and annoyed about how casually the kid admitted profiting from deception.
He decided not to escalate to school administration but told two friends to warn others. He also kept the earbuds as evidence in case others reported similar sales. The encounter left him more cautious about quick cash buys at school.
Confronting the Seller and What I Learned
He walked up to the kid after school, checked the serial number, and found the mismatched packaging and poor audio. The conversation turned from a simple refund request into a sharp lesson about recognizing scams and handling confrontation calmly.
My Conversation With the Kid
He started by asking for a refund and explained calmly that the AirPods looked counterfeit: mismatched serial numbers, cheaper materials, and no official Apple pairing behavior. The kid shrugged and said he bought them from a friend; he didn’t have a receipt or any proof of purchase. He offered to swap them for another pair or give partial money back, but the serial still showed non-genuine firmware when tested.
The buyer recorded parts of the exchange on his phone to remember details and keep a record in case the school or parents needed proof. He avoided raising his voice and focused on facts — model checks, packaging differences, and behavior of the charging case — rather than accusations.
The Response: “This Is Why My Family Is Rich and Yours Isn’t”
When pressed, the kid responded with, “This is why my family is rich and yours isn’t,” trying to deflect responsibility with status and insult. That line shifted the interaction into an emotional reaction rather than a factual negotiation. He used it to imply no consequences would follow and to intimidate the other student.
Instead of escalating, the buyer told the kid the comment was irrelevant to the transaction and repeated the request for a refund. The kid’s dismissal revealed a lack of accountability rather than authority. The exchange underscored how scammers sometimes rely on social power or insults to derail complaints.
Lessons Learned From Getting Scammed
He learned to verify electronics immediately: check the serial on Apple’s coverage site, test pairing, and inspect build quality before leaving the sale. If buying used electronics from individuals, insist on proof of purchase and do the checks in person. Photograph serials and packaging, and try a quick functional test like pairing and audio playback.
He also learned to keep interactions recorded when safe, to document timestamps, and to involve school staff or parents when a minor sells high-value items. Finally, he realized that confronting scammers works best when sticking to verifiable facts, staying calm, and having a plan to escalate if the seller refuses to cooperate.
More from Willow and Hearth:
Leave a Reply