Google
Web dqindia.com
Search by issue  | Sitemap

• Visit pcquest.com to know all about the business benefits of IT infrastructure outsourcing • Ad : Visit the New Living Digital 2.0

Home< > Nigeria 419 Scam > How the 419 Scam Works

Special Issues 

   - DQ Top 20
   - Customer Satisfaction Audit
   - Best Employer Survey (IT)
   - Best Employer Survey (BPO)
   - IT Person of the Year
   - Best E-Governed States
   - CIO Handbook

Enterprise

   - CIO Series
   - IT Case Book 2010 

Industry

eGovernance

Green IT

Online & Mobility


 
CSA
IT Salary Survey
BPO Salary Survey
IT Man of the Year
'We re-launched because we were being confused for a friendship portal'
R Sundar, President, Times Business Solutions


How the 419 Scam Works

A step-by-step guide to how the scamsters operate.



Monday, July 07, 2003

Advertisement

  1. An individual or company receives an email from an alleged "official" representing a foreign government or agency-more often from Nigeria or any other African nation

  2. An offer is made to transfer millions of dollars in "over-invoiced contract" funds into your personal bank account

  3. You are encouraged to travel overseas to complete the transaction 

  4. You are requested to provide blank company letterhead forms, banking account information, telephone, fax numbers 

  5. You receive numerous documents with official looking stamps, seals and logo testifying to the authenticity of the proposal 

  6. Eventually you must provide up-front or advance fees for various taxes, attorney fees, transaction fees or bribes

  7. 7. Finally, you have to travel to Nigeria-either directly or via a bordering country-to meet Nigerian government 'officials'

  8. Fake documents are made by the perpetrators to smuggle you into Nigeria

  9. Once there, you have no option but to 'cooperate' by paying money or ransom

Common variations on this scam include "overinvoiced" or "double invoiced" oil or other supply and service contracts where "some officials" are trying to get the funds out of Nigeria; crude oil and other commodity deals; a "bequest" left you in a will; "money cleaning" where the perpetrator has a lot of currency that needs to be "chemically cleaned" before it can be used and he needs the cost of the chemicals; "spoof banks" where there is supposedly money in your name already on deposit; and "paying" for a purchase with a check larger than the amount required and asking for change to be advanced. Or the victim will just be stiffed on a legitimate goods or services contract...the variations are very creative and virtually endless.





Page(s)   1   
End of the article

Product of the Week

A d v e r t i s e m e n t




Message boards

Discuss this and many other IT topics at the
CIOL message board

Previous Stories

Magazine Subscription | Sitemap | Contact Us | About Us | Advertising Print | Mediakit Print | jobs@cybermedia

Other CyberMedia web sites
  [Voice&Data]  [CIOL]  [PCQuest]  [Living Digital]  [IDC India]
  [Global Services Media ]  [DQ Channels]  [DQweek]  [CyberMedia Events]
  [Cybermedia Digital]  [CyberMedia India]   [Cyber Astro
  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]  [DARE]  [Technology Review]