The Nigerian Advance Fee scam is one of the most
notorious Internet frauds that has been running for
nearly 10 years. Large number of on-line and off-line
articles have been published on this scam, Police
depts in most European and American countries have
issued fraud alert notices, activists have formed
consumers groups to fight this evil - still Nigerian
conmen continue to defraud more people than any other
Internet fraud.
The origin of the con-game is usually a letter, e-mail,
fax etc. that promises millions of dollars for minor
help in a money laundering operation like swindling
money from unclaimed bank accounts, over-invoiced
bill in supply and service contracts where the operators
want to get the overage out of the country, a bequest
left in a will etc.
The offer could even may even look legitimate - like
request for help in investment, agency agreement,
import order on D/A, real estate venture etc.
The simplicity of the scheme and lure of easy money
attracts gullible people who eventaully loose large
sums in paying 'bribes', 'taxes', 'attorney fee',
cost of 'special software' and even 'erasing liquid'
- until they have no more money to pay or lose patience.
I have already described the modus operandi etc.
in earlier issues (http://www.infobanc.com/faida_archives.htm)
This is an update on previous articles.
Names that you should be careful of Any letter, fax,
e-mail with following names, coming from Nigeria or
other countties is a suspect:
- Mrs Mariam Abacha, widow of Sani Abacha the Late
Nigerian Head of State.
- Julius Nsekou Mobutu Sese Sekou, son of the late
president Mobutu Sese Sekou of the Congo Democratic
Republic(former Republic of Zaire).
- Victor Kamara, son of late Col. Raymond Camara,
the director of Seria Leone Diamond Corporation
- Loi C. Estrada, wife of Mr. Joseph Estrada, the
former President of Philippines
- Mrs. R.A. Kabila, wife of former president of
Congo Late Laurent Kabila
- Mrs. Roseline Coleman wife of late Chief Paul
Coleman from Sierra Leon
- Assortment of people (Director to Assistants)
from Banks, Contract Awarding Committees, brokers
for crude oil, Govt Depts, Security Companies etc.
located in Nigeria, seeking help
How to Detect Nigerian Crooks - some
Internet Resources
- Crime On-Line:
http://superhighway.is/iis/content.asp
This site is dedicated to information gathering
and distribution of info on fraud originating from
Nigeria and surrounding countries. The searchable
database has information on persons participating
in the fraud along with letters and copies of fake
official documents and stamps, crooks phone numbers
and e-mail addresses and even photos. You can add
your own information to the database of crooks and
use the forum to communicate with others who have
been in contact with the crooks.
- Correspondence with a Nigerian Crook
http://sweetchillisauce.com/nigeria.html
If you ever wondered how the crooks go about their
job - read a series of correspondence. The author
fabricated a handful of characters and situations
to unfold the scam design with liberal dose of humour
- Adventures of Wendy Willcox and her dog
Willis
http://www.angelfire.com/comics/wendywillcox/
Read through this scam correspondence page and learn
how Wendy Willcox diminishes and ridicules Advance
Fee fraudsters
- More correspondence with Nigerian Crooks
http://www.xach.com/togo/
Check out a long correspondence between Zach Beane
and the alleged Nigerian crook Dr. Solomon.
Nigerian scam is the most common type of fraud one
finds in Internet and has defrauded more people than
any other Internet scam - the reason I keep writing
about this menace. Please remain alert and spread
the message to as many of your friends as possible.
Being aware is about half the battle won !