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joewein.de LLC fighting spam and scams on the Internet |
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Victims never receive this non-existent fortune but are tricked into sending their money to the criminals, who remain anonymous. They hide their real identity and location by using fake names and fake postal addresses as well as communicating via anonymous free email accounts and mobile phones.
Read more about such scams here or in our 419 FAQ. Use the Scam-O-Matic to verify suspect emails.
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Some comments by the Scam-O-Matic about the following email:
Fraud email example:
From: "jovan kran" <jovank03@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2008 14:11:13 +0200
Subject: FROM JOVAN KRAN YOUR URGENT ASSISTANCE IS NEEDED.
Dear Friend
I am writing you from Cotonou, republic of Benin. I work in a bank here and
there is the sum of $11.5M floating in a dormant account that belongs to a
late customer who died alongside his younger brother in the crash of
December, 2003.
www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/africa/12/26/benin.crash/
<http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/africa>
I will like this money be transfered into your account as the next of kin of
the deceased customer because the money will automatically go into
government treasury at the end of this year. Reply this mail while I furnish
you on how this will work out. This is 100% risk FREE and LEGAL
REPLY ME ON THIS MAIL BELOW:
NAME: JOVAN KRAN
EMAIL:
jkran001@gmail.com<http://fr.mc243.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=jkran001@gmail.com>
Yours faithfully,
Jovan kran
Anti-fraud resources: