Guide to scams and rip-offs

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African e-mail or Money Transfers (Advance Fee Fraud):

The Advance Fee Fraud has been operating for some considerable time, which suggests that it continues to be successful for its operators. 
It often has the words ?Assistance Needed? or ?please help my family? in the subject line, claims that your assistance is needed to transfer money, usually from Nigeria or other West African country. You are promised a share of usually around $35 million, and all you need to do to get this money is to agree to let the operators use your bank account.

The scam is often based on the premise that some major event or misfortune, such as the overthrow of a government, has resulted in large sums of money being held in a country by a person or persons who are seeking help in transferring the money to another country. A proportion of the money is offered for help transferring the money.

 Sometimes the operators will invite you to fly out to West Africa ? Please don?t. People who have fallen for this scam in the past have been kidnapped and held for ransom, even murdered!

 At some point, you will be asked to pay up front an Advance Fee of some sort, be it an "Advance Fee", "Transfer Tax", "Performance Bond", or to extend credit, grant COD privileges, send back "change" on an overage cashier's check or money order, whatever. If you pay the Fee, there are often many "Complications" which require still more advance payments until you either quit, run out of money, or both. I heard of a case recently where a victim of this fraud sold her home to pay these up front fees and lost everything she owned.

The Nigerian version of this Scam is, according to published reports, the Third to Fifth largest industry in Nigeria.


Dear Sir, First, I must solicit your strictest confidence in this transaction. This is by virtue of its nature utterly confidential and 'top secret'. You have been recommended by an associate who has assured me in confidence of your ability and reliability to prosecute a transaction of great magnitude involving a pending business transaction requiring maximum confidence. We are top officers of the Federal Government Contract Review Panel who are interested in the importation of goods into our country with funds presently trapped in Nigeria. We solicit your assistance to enable us to transfer into your account the said trapped funds. I have been delegated as a matter of trust by my colleagues to look for an overseas partner into whose account we would transfer the sum of $US21,320,000 (TWENTY ONE MILLION THREE HUNDRED AND TWENTY THOUSAND UNITED STATES DOLLARS)?We have agreed that you will be entitled to 30% of the total sum, 60% for us and 10% will be set aside for any expenses while transacting the business.

The letter goes on to explain that Nigerian civil servants are forbidden to operate foreign bank accounts. All that is needed are details of your or your company's bank account and perhaps blank pages of letterhead. Companies and individuals responding to this approach later receive another letter asking for money for a last minute bribe.

There is evidence from around the world that company directors, lawyers and other professional people have reportedly lost significant amounts of cash. And, inevitably, having parted with the money, they never heard from their African business partner again. Others have had personal and company bank accounts emptied of money.

Don't reply to these requests.

Never, ever, reveal your bank details to strangers.