Those wacky Nigerians

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mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
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#1
SWEET HOME, Ore. — An Oregon woman who is out $400,000 after falling for a well-known Internet scam says she wasn't a sucker or an easy mark.

Janella Spears of Sweet Home says she simply became curious when she received an e-mail promising her $20.5 million if she would only help out a long-lost relative identified as J.B. Spears with a little money up front.

Spears told KATU-TV about the scammers' ability to identify her relative by name was persuasive.

"That's what got me to believe it," She said. "So, why wouldn't you send over $100?"

Spears, who is a nursing administrator and CPR teacher, said she mortgaged the house and took a lien out on the family car, and ran through her husband's retirement account.

"The retirement he was dreaming of — cruising and going around and seeing America — is pretty much gone for him right now," she said.

She estimates it will take two years to clear the debt that accumulated in the more than two years she spent sending money to con artists.

Her family and bank officials told her it was all a scam, she said, and begged her to stop, but she persisted because she became obsessed with getting paid.

The scheme is often called the "Nigerian scam" and it's familiar to many people with e-mail accounts. It still exists and it still works.

Spears first sent $100 through an untraceable wire service as directed by the scammers. Then, more multimillion dollar promises followed so long as she sent more money.

The scammers sent Spears official-looking documents and certificates from the Bank of Nigeria and the United Nations. President Bush and FBI Director Robert Mueller were also involved, the e-mails said, and needed her help.

They sent official-looking documents and certificates from the Bank of Nigeria and even from the United Nations, saying her payment was "guaranteed."

But it wasn't and now Spears is paying the price for her costly lesson.

"The hope is [other people] are not going to fall as hard as I fell," Spears said.
 
May 4, 2005
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#4
lol. sweet home is like 40 miles from where im at. that shit was in my news paper the other day.

it actually happened in lebanon. and that bitch is full of shit.. shes a tweaker.
 

GHP

Sicc OG
Jul 21, 2002
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#7
credit card fraud is big business in nigeria, Romania and other countries. Every time i see a eastern block looking name at work they always have 50 trades and 45 negititives on credit cards and lines of credit they open up in the span of like 3 days they run em up and bounce back to whereeveer they came from caked up offa hundreds of thousands of dollars in bad credit card debt. I dont even bother working them even if i found them they ain't paying no one.
 

GHP

Sicc OG
Jul 21, 2002
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#10
An old guy my coworker has to call fell for the old rich guy from zimbabwe cash transfer scam. I swear some people are fuckin stupid, he even faxed the letter in the office as a for m of proof that when hes gets the cash hes gonna pay off his bofa debt lol. stupid ass
 
Mar 14, 2003
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#13
the owner of the company i work for decided to fuck with one of these dudes. starvin marvin wanted a bunch of products shipped to africa, c.o.d. long story short my boss made him put a deposit down for 7500 and when it cleared we would ship the full shipment (about 25000 bucks of shit). dude wired us his info, it was a fake id and some persons credit card from connecticut. we ended up getting contacted by visa fraud. they made us pay back the money (of course) but my boss said he was retaining 1500 for the work that he put in to get this accomplished. it was fucking comedy and my boss had a blast doin it
 
May 16, 2002
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#14
My uncle and aunt were talking about this. They got an email from someone who is sick in Saudi Arabia and wants to give them gold bullions for a little "help." They actually believed it and gave it thought. Last I heard my uncle is communicating with the person. I better tell him that shit is fake. Now I know how they get people. They name relatives to make it convincing. He has a master's degree and he actually believes it lol.
 
Dec 13, 2003
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#15
one of those scams was trying to chop it up with me on instant message yesterday. she told me (in very broken english) that she was born and raised in texas. i told her i was from the bay area. she asked where that was..and was in the US. at that time...i decided to play with this one for a little bit. she told me she was nigerian american. her IM picture was of a blonde blue eyed russian woman. told me her dad died when she was young and she had been displaced her african mother for 16 years prompting her to africa to locate her. now shes stuck there with no money and deparately wants to come back to the states. but she has no home to go to because she lost it in "katrina". shes also a model and a fashion designer.

i told her i work for the government and she signs out
 
Oct 30, 2002
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www.soundclick.com
#16
one of those scams was trying to chop it up with me on instant message yesterday. she told me (in very broken english) that she was born and raised in texas. i told her i was from the bay area. she asked where that was..and was in the US. at that time...i decided to play with this one for a little bit. she told me she was nigerian american. her IM picture was of a blonde blue eyed russian woman. told me her dad died when she was young and she had been displaced her african mother for 16 years prompting her to africa to locate her. now shes stuck there with no money and deparately wants to come back to the states. but she has no home to go to because she lost it in "katrina". shes also a model and a fashion designer.

i told her i work for the government and she signs out
shoulda told her: