It's about time

by JeffT 5 Replies latest jw friends

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    77 arrested in e-mail scam crackdown

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
    ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

    WASHINGTON -- The e-mails arrive out of the blue, from Nigeria or other exotic countries. They tell of inheritances, political problems, other reasons someone needs to get money out of the country. If you help, they promise to let you share the money.

    Unfortunately, thousands of people fall for the scam, losing an average of $3,000 to $4,000 each.

    So far this year, an average of more than 800 people a month have filed complaints about such scams.

    Hoping to stem the losses, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service announced an international crackdown Wednesday in which more than 540,000 fake checks with a face value of $2.1 billion have been seized.

    There have been 60 arrests in the Netherlands, 16 in Nigeria and one in Canada, the Postal Inspection Service said, and the effort is continuing.

    "There is no room in the mail for any of these phony come-ons," Postmaster General John Potter said.

    Most of the cons start with e-mails telling of an inheritance or lottery win and ask the victim to help bring the money to the United States. The victim is asked to cash a check that comes in the mail and to send part of the money back to the person sending it, said Greg Campbell, inspector in charge of global security and investigations for the Postal Inspection Service.

    Then that person disappears with the money and the original check bounces, leaving the victim with a loss.

    Retired people have lost their nest eggs and young families have been defrauded of their savings for a home, Potter said.

    Many of the cases originate in the Netherlands, where West African con artists operate from Internet cafes, said Johan Van Hartskamp, commissioner of the Amsterdam police.

    In what he called "Operation Dutch Treat," police have arrested 60 people there, with three extradited to the United States and four more facing extradition. The rest are being prosecuted in the Netherlands, he said.

    Ibrahim Lamorde, director of the Nigerian Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, said the problem is monumental and "will only be surmounted through global efforts."

    U.S. Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher said: "There is no lottery. There is no inheritance. The checks are not real. But there are real victims. The crime knows no borders, and our coordinated law enforcement knows no borders."

    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1155AP_Fake_Checks.html

  • deaconbluez
    deaconbluez

    But I was just about to help the Prefect of Malawi secure $4,500,000!!!!

  • Gopher
    Gopher

    I am sick to death of these spam e-mails. They always sound reverential and respectful, and they sound so desperate for your help.

    These spammer scammers seek to take advantage of some gullible people and are disgusting. I'm glad something is being done about it.

  • AWAKE&WATCHING
    AWAKE&WATCHING

    A friend of mine got one of these scam letters in the mail this week WITH A CHECK.

    Same thing happenened to my BIL a few years ago, he sent a cashiers check for 5000. to cover the taxes on his free new car.Needless to say he never saw the car or his money again.

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    I received this from another member of the board, who wants to remain anonymous.

    "I had $12,000.00 worth of travelers checks sent to me just recently. The guy was talking to me in Yahoo Messenger and told me he was down in a neighboring city (but temporarily out of the country and couldn't pay some bills while overseas) and being the honest Christian that I was, he told me he trusted me enough to send me the checks. He wanted me to deposit some of them into my checking acct. pay some bills for him. Well....I'm no dummy. NOBODY is going to send me, a total stranger, checks worth even $50.00. I went to my local Police dept. before even opening the package. They told me to open it and then either shred them to pieces or send them to whoever they were supposedly drawn through. I sent them to American Express after I called them and they confirmed they were fraudulent checks.

    This is what could have happened if I was dumb. I would have deposited them, wrote checks to make payments to who knows where and then the checks would have bounced and I would have been out $$$$$$$$'s of dollars."

    While we're at it, a couple of days ago my wife got an e-mail at work that claimed to be the IRS trying to send her a refund, it even had the IRS logo on it. They wanted her debit card number, SS#, PIN and the Verification number on the back of the card. We forwarded the whole thing to the IRS.

    What really bugs me is that some not very bright people, or less than savy computer users - older folks? - will fall for this crap.

  • Honesty
    Honesty

    Hmmm...

    The check I got was real.

    The money was real.

    The person was real.

    His name was J.F. Rutherford and he has helped a whole heap of people.

    He even wrote a booklet way back in the early 1900's, "Millions Now Living Will Never Die"

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