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Life Talk!

You gotta take care of this scammer email. That's very important.

aaron.kung

aaron.kung

China

I login my gamil inbox as usual today, I noticed there are several mails in scam box. When I opened it, something shocked me! It said I will receive 15 million dollars from the "damned god". Of course, I didn't believe it, the first thing I was going for is to search some scammer information from google, then I found the Anti-Fraud International, there are quite some useful comments on this scammer mail. Here is the content of those scammer mails.

The first one

fromDany Ibrahim <>

to
dateSat, Nov 13, 2010 at 6:48 PM
subjectGood day,
signed-byyahoo.com

hide details Nov 13 (1 day ago)

 

FROM THE DESK OF DANY IBRAHIM
THE AUDITING AND ACCOUNTING
SECTION MANAGER BANK OF AFRICA,
(B.O.A.) OUAGADOUGOU BURKINA FASO.

Dear Friend,

I know that this message will come to you as a surprise. I am the Auditing and Accounting section manager with Bank of Africa, Ouagadougou Burkina faso. I Hope that you will not expose or betray this trust and confident that I am about to repose on you for the mutual benefit of our both families.
I need your urgent assistance in transferring the sum of ($15) Million US Dollars only to your account within 10 or 14 banking days. This money has been dormant for years in our Bank without claim.I want the bank to release the money to you as the nearest person to our deceased customer late Mr Andrew Eich who died along with his supposed next of kin in an air crash since 31st October 1999.I don't want the money to go into government treasury as an abandoned fund. So this is the reason why I am contacting you so that the bank can release the money to you as the next of kin to the deceased customer.

Please I would like you to keep this proposal as a top secret and delete it if you are not interested.Upon receipt of your reply, I will give you full details on how the business will be executed and also note that you will have 30% of the above mentioned sum if you agree to handle this business with me. I am expecting your urgent response as soon as you receive my message.

Regard,
Mr. Dany Ibrahim.

 

The second one,

fromWestern Union <>
to
dateSun, Nov 14, 2010 at 7:37 PM
subjectThe first $6000.00 was sent today
mailed-bytruenet.com.br

hide details 7:37 PM (45 minutes ago)

Dear Friend
The first $6000.00 was sent today. My working partner has helped me to send the first $6000.00 to you through western union.So contact our Western Union claims Agent to pick up this $6000 now: Contact person:Mr.Don C John TEL: +2348051509398.E-mail: () Ask him to give you the mtcn, sender name,to pick the $6,000.00. I told him to keep sending you $6000.00 daily untill the payment of $1.600,000.00 is completed.
Again forward him your Full Name Telephone number and adress so that he will be sure.
Thanks, Mr.Daniel Oma

 

The third one

dateSun, Nov 14, 2010 at 7:45 PM
subject Dear friend,


Dear friend,
 
I am writing to seek your cooperation over this business, Please due welcome this letter.
 
I am Mr.Idrissa Ahmed, the director of the accounts & auditing dept .at the African Development Bank Ouagadougou-west Africa . (A D B). With due respect, I have decided to contact you on a business transaction that will be beneficial to both of us.
 
At the bank's last accounts/auditing evaluations, my staffs came across an old account which was being maintained by a foreign client who we learnt was among the deceased passengers of  motor accident  on November. 2003,  the deceased was unable to run this account since his death. The account has remained dormant without the knowledge of his family since it was put in a safe deposit account in the bank for future investment by the client.
 
Since his demise, even the members of his family haven't applied for claims over this fund and it has been in the safe deposit account until I discovered that it cannot be claimed since our client is a foreign national and we are sure that he has no next of kin here to file claims over the money. As the director of the department, this discovery was brought to my office so as to decide what is to be done.  I decided to seek ways through which to transfer this money out of the bank and out of the country too.
 
The total amount in the account is Ten million five hundred thousand dollars (USD 10,500,000.00).with my positions as staffs of the bank, I am handicapped because I cannot operate foreign accounts and cannot lay bonafide claim over this money. The client was a foreign national and you will only be asked to act as his next of kin and I will supply you with all the necessary information and bank data to assist you in being able to transfer this money to any bank of your choice where this money could be transferred into.
 
The total sum will be shared as follows: 50% for me, 50% for you and expenses incidental occur during the transfer will be incur by both of us. The transfer is risk free on both sides hence you are going to follow my instruction till the fund transfer to your account.
 
Since I work in this bank that is why you should be confident in the success of this transaction because you will be updated with information as at when desired.
 
I will wish you to keep this transaction secret and confidential as I am hoping to retire with my share of this money at the end of transaction which will be when this money is safety in your account. I will then come over to your country for sharing according to the previously agreed percentages. You might even have to advise me on possibilities of investment in your country or elsewhere of our choice. May God help you to help me to a restive retirement, Amen.
 
 
Please for further information and enquires feel free to contact me back immediately for more explanation and better understanding .
I am waiting for your urgent response!!!
 
Thanks and remain blessed.
Mr Idrissa Ahmed

 

The offical comments from Anti-Fraud International (you can also check it out on http://antifraudintl.org/showthread.php?t=6965)

Arrow Why next of kin emails are always fake <!- / icon and title -><!- message ->Assuming that you actually get here to this part, here's some reasons that next of kin emails are fake, aside from the fact that they are ALWAYS a scam.

The next of kin scam is a form of the so-called "Advanced fee fraud". You would keep paying money for a bunch of fake documents and so on that will cost you money but you will never get that money from the deceased person or the banker or lawyer.

If you have read about how to identify a scam email (which is here) then in addition to things like bad grammar, poor spelling, even poorer punctuation, the use of free email servers, etc. these are some other things that make a next of kin scam format completely bogus.


1. You can never stand as next of kin to someone you are not related to.
This is a fact. Nothing that the "lawyer" or "banker" tells you will ever change that fact. If the person who sent you the email was an actual banker or lawyer s/he would know that anyway and wouldn't even be trying to do this. What you have is an email from a scammer/criminal. His only goal is to steal your money.

Black's Law Dictionary (8th ed. p. 1070) defines "next of kin" as either 1) the person or persons mostly closely related to the decedent by blood or affinity, and 2) an intestate's heirs—that is, the person or persons entitled to inherit personal property to a decedent who has not left a will.

What does that mean? It means there must be a blood relationship between you and the dead person. That mean you have to have a common ancestor, or some kind of biological relationship (adoption is ok). Affinity is the other type of relationship and that basically means you have to have an "in-law" relationship with the dead person. If you don't have one of these then forget it. You cannot ever stand as next of kin for someone you don't know. Not ever.

Money in a bank that belongs to someone who died is protected by banking laws in each country. If the account goes dormant (no activity) then that money is taken over by the government after a period of time, usually around 7 years. That means the government has an interest in the money because the government will get that money after 7 years and governments like to have money. They aren't going to let it go easily and certainly not to some lawyer proposing you as the next of kin for someone who died in plane crash or a car crash.

Bank accounts that are dormant are easily identified by the bank and banking laws and banking regulations govern how such accounts are to be dealt with. You can't hide a dormant account in a bank.

In short, it just can't be done. You can't be next of kin for some stranger. Not ever. Never.

2. A banker/lawyer told me I could.
Sorry, the person who told you that is not a banker or lawyer. He is a scammer/criminal. He just wants to steal your money.

3. A banker/lawyer in the UK said….
No he or she did not. No real UK lawyer would tell you that. You have an email from a scammer. (And in the U.K. they are called barristers or solicitors).

4. A banker/lawyer in Togo, Ghana, Nigeria, Benin etc. said….
This is humorous believe it it not. But seriously, when you get an email telling you that some person deposited millions of dollars in a bank in one of these countries it is always a scam. That's because people with money to deposit for safekeeping will put it in a bank that is safe and secure in a major banking center even if it's an offshore bank. Safe secure banking centers include London, New York, Zurich, Paris, and even the Cayman Islands. It does not include countries in west Africa. No offense to anyone who lives in those countries but such countries are usually not stable politically or economically and their banking systems are underdeveloped at best. Money likes safety and putting money in a west African bank is not safe.

5. A banker in Burkina Faso said…
I don't know if it's good news or not but this seems to be the only kind of scam that scammers in Burkina Faso know how to run. That's probably good news because if you get one then you know it's a scam.

Someone posted it somewhere else so I'll repeat the point. The United Nations ranks countries of the world on a human development index that ranges from the best (#1) to the lowest, which happens to be #177. Burkina Faso is ranked number 176. Unfortunately for them, life is pretty difficult there. Keep them in mind when/if you pray for things to get better in the world. If you add up the total money from all of the Burkina Faso scam formats we have posted here they would probably total more than Burkina Faso's annual national budget. If all of that money was floating around in banks in Burkina Faso, why is Burkina Faso not doing better economically? Simple, none of that money exists. It's just a scammer talking. There is no money for you. The best thing you can do is delete the email and forget it.

6. "We have had a lottery/raffle for our client's estate and you have won".
If #1 is not legal, having some kind of lottery/raffle draw for the estate of a deceased person is even more so. If they tell you that you have won something like this you can safely delete it as a scam because it simply isn't going to happen and it is NOT real.


7. My client/customer died without naming a next of kin…
I'm not sure where this idea came from. Maybe it's a scammer who uses too many drugs, maybe it's a scammer with an over-active imagination. I don't know, maybe this kind of nonsense actually happens in banks in a few countries, but if so, not legally. This is fiction, folks. In the real world even the greediest business person in the world knows and understands that he or she is mortal. No one who makes millions of dollars is going to leave it in a bank where no kin or friends can get to it. No real person is going to leave their hard-earned money to the government if they can help it. No one is gong to leave millions of dollars to some banker. It just doesn't happen. Not in the real world.

8. I was named a beneficiary in a will.
Great. Have you actually seen the will? If you have send us a copy because we can have people look at it to tell if it's a real will. But why would you be named as a beneficiary in a will? Do you actually know the person who died and left you money? What did you do yo deserve that money? People with money usually give it to someone who has done something useful for the person. And that doesn't mean carrying their bag at an airport or opening a car door or something like that. In Hollywood that happens. In Scamland it happens. In real life it does not. You can delete that email because it's a scam.At last, I hope we all can take a good lesson from this. Good luck!

01:48 PM Nov 14 2010 |

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Ryo

Ryo

Saudi Arabia

i have one  and   i didnt replay

and didnt delte

 

the post delte by himslfe 

01:59 PM Nov 14 2010 |

Benjipie

Benjipie

United Kingdom

Have you seen the movie "Yes man"?  It's about a guy that always says yes, even to spam emails!! It's pretty funny.

Ben

Blog

05:44 AM Nov 15 2010 |

aaron.kung

aaron.kung

China

Well, it's really disgusting when receiving those mails, and I always get annoyed. How could anyone believe that shit? You're not going to get rich overnight without any hard work! That's the point! You're just a common, you don't deserver that good luck!

09:54 AM Nov 15 2010 |

Benjipie

Benjipie

United Kingdom

I totally agree, you have to be pretty gullible to believe that stuff and you're right, there are no 'get rich quick schemes' that work.  Just spam it in your mailbox, don't let it bother you.

Ben.

01:25 PM Nov 15 2010 |