Is
someone giving you a generous donation!? Think again!
RCMP
message
You
pick up your mail like every other day, finding your usual bills, publicity flyers
and an envelope coming from Africa, addressed to you. You ask yourself «Who
do I know that lives in Africa? Curious to see whats inside, you open
it. What you discover leaves you even more perplexed. Its a cheque for a
couple of thousand dollars made out to you along with a short letter. In the letter,
you are asked for various reasons, to deposit the cheque into your account, and
then withdraw a part of the money to be returned to the sender, to the address
indicated in the letter. They will tell you to keep the rest of the money for
your trouble. Do you think this is an act of generosity from a stranger? If you
answer yes to this question...think again! This is a classic example of a type
of mass marketing fraud, referred to as West African or Nigerian fraud. The cheque
you received and deposited is counterfeit, in other words it has no value whatsoever.
The money that you withdraw from your account and send away in response to such
a scam is lost forever.
There
are various ways for criminals to get your private information and use it to steal
from you. Here are some of the methods that they will try to use to lure you in
their trap:
Emails and chat rooms:
Once
theyve made contact with you, they give you a fake identity and they benefit
from the anonymity of the Internet. They can talk with you for weeks, and even
months to establish a comfort level. They will tell you that they are doing humanitarian
works in a foreign country, or that they are offering you the chance to work from
home and make great money. They will make up any story in order to send you a
counterfeit cheque and get some money back.
Classified ads posted on the Internet:
Criminals
will also use classified advertisements posted on web sites or items posted on
eBay to get in touch with you. They will send you a cheque for an amount much
greater than your asking price and tell you to send them back the extra.
Lotteries:
Criminals
use the names of legitimate organisations to make you believe that you won a prize.
They tell you that youve won a large amount of money but that you have to
pay certain fees to receive your winnings. They ask you to deduct these fees from
the cheque that you will receive.
Previous scams:
Criminals
can also get your confidential information from a previous scam. Lets say
youve filled out a lottery coupon that unbeknownst to you wasnt legitimate.
The information that youve given out can be shared between several criminals
that are all trying to steal from you.
How
can you protect yourself from West African fraud?
NEVER SEND MONEY!
Be careful when filling out sweepstakes coupons. Be certain that the company is
legitimate;
Never respond to lotteries that require a payment from you to cover delivery or
taxes to receive your prize. Legitimate lotteries will never ask a winner to pay
in order to release their prize, its illegal;
Never answer unsolicited mail or email. If its coming from a stranger dont
respond to it;
Be vigilant when engaging a conversation with someone over the Internet. You dont
have any way to confirm the identity of the person;
Never give out your address to anyone you dont know very well or dont
know at all;
If you place a classified advertisement on the Internet or an item on eBay, do
not accept any payment that is greater than the asking;
Never send money to a stranger, to someone you dont know very well or someone
youve never met in person;
Ask yourself this question: why would someone you dont know send you a large
cheque out of the blue? Beware. Its probably a trap!
If you ever receive such a cheque, bring it to your local police.
If
you have received a cheque, if you have a doubt or if you have any questions regarding
this type of fraud:
Contact the Canadian Anti-Fraud Call Centre (PhoneBusters) at 1-888-495-8501 or
visit their web site at www.phonebusters.com;
Contact COLT Centre of Operations Linked to Telemarketing at 514-939-8304;
Contact your local police.