|
|||||||
|
|||||||
Save MoneySaving MoneyFinding the Best Air Fares Choose a Credit Card Funerals Making Sense of Savings Buying Food Saving on Groceries 66 Ways to Save Money PrePaid Cell PhonesTracfoneNet10 Verizon AT&T GoPhone HousesHome ImprovementYour Home on the Line Home Refinance The Best Mortgage Avoid Foreclosure Buying a House Can you Afford to? Mortgage Calculator CarsBuying a CarAuto Insurance Auto Repair Buying a New Car Buying a Used Car Car Rental Leasing a Car Internet ScamsTop 5 ScamsPhishing Telemarketing Fraud Ponzi Scheme Pyramid Scheme Nigerian Letter Identity Theft Advance Fee Scheme Health Insurance Frauds Letter of Credit Prime Bank Note Ways to Stop ID Theft InvestingQuestions on InvestingMutual Funds Your Own BusinessEbay Online StorePayDay LoansAbout PayDay Loans |
Nigerian Letter or "419" FraudNigerian letter frauds combine the threat of impersonation fraud with a variation of an advance fee scheme in which a letter, mailed from Nigeria, offers the recipient the "opportunity" to share in a percentage of millions of dollars that the author, a self-proclaimed government official, is trying to transfer illegally out of Nigeria. The recipient is encouraged to send information to the author, such as blank letterhead stationary, bank name and account numbers and other identifying information using a facsimile number provided in the letter. Some of these letters have also been received via E-mail through the Internet. The scheme relies on convincing a willing victim, who has demonstrated a "propensity for larceny" by responding to the invitation, to send money to the author of the letter in Nigeria in several installments of increasing amounts for a variety of reasons. |
||||||