Nigerian Scams
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Nigerian Scam
CLICK HERE FOR A GREAT EXAMPLE OF A NIGERIAN EMAIL SCAM
By Nowshade Kabir
Although this scam has its root from Nigeria dated a decade back,
nowadays, you receive similar scam letters from many African
countries, notably, Nigeria, Benin, Togo and even South Africa.
The subject lines of these emails are pretty similar. Something
like: Business relationship, Urgent Assistance needed, Soliciting
for your assistance, A cry for help etc. Most of the emails from
this scam begin in the same way. Here are two excerpts from most
recent emails that we received:
"I am Engr Moses Ekpen a director in the budget and planning
department of the Federal Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Resources (FMPNR), I had a seven man Tenders Board Committee in
charge of contract award and Payment approvals. I came to know of
you in my search for a reliable and reputable person to handle a
very confidential transaction, which involves the transfer of a huge
sum of money to a foreign account."
Or
"I am Mrs. Mariam Abacha, the widow of Gen. Sani Abacha, The Late
Nigerian Military Head of State. You were introduced to me through
the Chamber of Commerce. I am presently in distress and under House
arrest while my son Mohammed is undergoing trial in Lagos and Abuja.
He is presently detained in prison custody. The government has
frozen all the family account and auctioned all our properties.
You wear your seat belt. You lock your doors. You even wear sunscreen!
But if you don’t keep tabs on what your public records say about you,
you’re not fully protected.
To save the family from total bankruptcy I have managed to ship to
Europe and Asia through a Shipping company, the sum of US20,
000,000.00 respectively kept by my late husband."
The essence of these emails are also basically the same – the person
although does not know you, thanks to your business reputation, has
decided to contact you with a very confidential proposal to transfer
a mind boggling amount of money from his country to any foreign
land.
There could be numerous stories but the bottom line is they require
your help to transfer the amount. For your service they will promise
you something from 10 to 40% of the whole amount. There would be a
telephone no or an email address to contact the person.
You may wonder how they swindle people.
There are various ways that the crooks rip off their victims. Some
of the most commons ones of them are described below:
They will ask you to open a bank account under their name. On their
second step, they will ask you to deposit a sum of say US$ 10000 to
that account, explaining if the account does not have any decent
amount, the officials those who are responsible for transferring the
promised millions of dollars would become suspicious and won’t
authorize the transaction. Once you deposited the asked sum, they
simply withdraw it and disappear. Usually they choose a bank where
they might have some connections. So you, after losing your money,
do not get any help from the bank either.
You could spend all your time worrying about identity fraud. Or you could
leave that to us.
They will ask you to send some merchandize or gifts for the
officials they need to bribe in order to make the transactions of
the assumed millions of dollars smoothly. Naturally, you never hear
from them once you sent the requested gifts to their address.
We even heard stories like this one: A man was persuaded to come to
Nigeria to look after the transaction by himself. Over there he was
kept hostage until he shifted all his liquid assets to the thugs.
Looking at the increasing quantity of scam emails that we receive,
this only convinces that many fall for this seemingly simple trap.
According to FBI these swindlers have defrauded millions of dollars
from gullible people.
There could be other variations of this scam, next time you read an
email that feels suspicious, just delete it! There are other ways of
making money!
Where can I get the latest Anti-Virus software?
Some words of cautions! Although most of these scams originate from
African countries, please do not generalize and consider that all
companies form these countries are bad. As usual a few people are
responsible for tarnishing the reputation of a country.
About The Author
Nowshade Kabir, Ph.D., is the founder, primary developer and present
CEO, of
Rusbiz.com, a global
business to business e-commerce portal with feature like
storefronts, aggregated catalog, e-marketplace, trade leads,
internal messaging system supply chain solutions, etc. With a
doctorate in Information Technology, Dr. Kabir has worked an advisor
to government projects and has over 12 years experience in
International Trade. An author of many B2B and business related
articles; he publishes a bi-weekly E-zine for online business
community. You can subscribe to his newsletter free of charge from
Rusbiz.com.
nowshade@rusbiz.com
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Nowshade_Kabir
http://EzineArticles.com/?Nigerian-Scam&id=16373
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