Consumer Warning: NationsRemarketingGroup.com Shows Multiple Serious Fraud Red Flags

Published: March 28, 2026

Consumers should use extreme caution with nationsremarketinggroup.com, a website presenting itself as a vehicle auction business under the name Nations Remarketing Group. Based on publicly available information and a recent Better Business Bureau investigation, there are substantial reasons to believe this operation is not a legitimate vehicle auction company and may be part of a fraudulent scheme targeting online buyers. 

According to the Better Business Bureau of the Midwest Plains, the site is tied to a scam operation that allegedly used the identity of a legitimate Kansas business to appear credible. BBB states that at least one consumer was reportedly defrauded out of $76,015 after wiring money for a vehicle that was never delivered. BBB also says it reported the matter to the Iola Police Department and the Kansas Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division

What this website claims

On its own contact page, nationsremarketinggroup.com lists the following business information:

The site also presents itself as a functioning auction marketplace and features numerous glowing customer testimonials describing successful vehicle purchases and deliveries. 

Why this raises major concern

BBB’s investigation states that the website used 1605 East St, Iola, Kansas, to establish credibility, but that address is associated with a real local auto business ecosystem — not this online auction site. BBB says it contacted Sigg Motors directly and confirmed that the legitimate business had no connection whatsoever to the website. BBB further states that a similarly named legitimate company at that address is also not associated with the site. 

BBB also reports that:

  • the site listed luxury vehicles and RVs at suspiciously low prices,

  • used photos copied from legitimate auction platforms,

  • provided at least one victim with a real VIN tied to a legitimate Carfax report, and

  • allegedly took payment by wire transfer before communication stopped. 

Those are not minor inconsistencies. Those are classic high-risk fraud indicators.

Public warning signs already documented

BBB’s public business profile for Nations Remarketing Group says:

  • The business was reported to the BBB on March 6, 2026,

  • BBB was unable to reach a representative by phone,

  • BBB verified that the business using that address was not associated with the website, and

  • The business currently carries an F rating

BBB’s March 26, 2026, investigation goes even further and explicitly describes the operation as a fraudulent website posing as a vehicle auction company

Our assessment

Based on the website’s own published contact details, the mismatch between the claimed address and the legitimate businesses tied to that location, and BBB’s investigation and warning, consumers should not send money to nationsremarketinggroup.com

At a minimum, the site shows multiple severe credibility failures. At worst, it appears to be an active impersonation-based vehicle fraud operation.

If you were targeted or paid money

If you sent funds to this operation, act immediately. BBB advises victims of suspected wire fraud to:

  • contact your bank right away and request a wire recall if applicable,

  • file a complaint with the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3),

  • file a report with BBB Scam Tracker, and

  • preserve every email, receipt, invoice, screenshot, VIN, and payment record.

Ryan

ScammerCooked.com was created to make it easy for everyday people to fight back against fraud. In a world full of fake sellers, fake listings, and scammers pretending to be legitimate businesses, too many consumers are left with no simple, public way to report what happened and help stop it from happening to someone else. We built ScammerCooked.com to change that — a place where people can call out scams, share evidence, and help expose bad actors before they strike again.

Our mission is simple: make it easier for scammers to get caught, reported, and publicly exposed. We support consumers by helping connect fraud reports to the right authorities, including the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). By making reporting more accessible and visible, ScammerCooked.com aims to turn frustration into action.

The idea for the site was born after our founder nearly purchased a vehicle through what appeared to be a legitimate auction house, only to discover it was a scam. That experience made one thing clear: scams are everywhere, and the tools for fighting back are still too hard to find. ScammerCooked.com exists so scammers can stop scamming — and get cooked.

https://scammercooked.com