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Scam Letters: 542 different examples!
By date received, with names of supposed senders, country where the money is supposed to have originated, and amount. Many duplicates omitted. Many of these emails have been reformatted for readability; the recipient's email address, and all angle brackets or HTML tags were removed. All of the other email and postal addresses, phone numbers, etc., are as given in the email, but be warned, do not attempt to contact the perpetrators!. They are ruthless and violent criminals.

How does the fraud work?
The bait is the fictional millions of dollars described in each one of these letters. The goal is to get you to come up with money for the "expenses" required to transfer those millions to you. The victim thinks, a few hundred or a few thousand dollars is trivial when $31 million is at stake. Each demand for more money is claimed to be the very last obstacle before the big money is released. Sometimes, the victim is lured to Nigeria, where even worse things happen.

How did they get my email address?
Exactly the same way all spammers get your email address. Spammers "harvest" email addresses mentioned on web sites. Others run "dictionary attacks" — programs which query mail servers if they have an address AAA100, AAA101, AAA102, etc. That's why you get tons of unsolicited commercial email even if you've kept your email address a secret. And spammers sell each other CD's with millions of addresses. Remember that practically all spam email is fraudulent anyway, so there is no reason why sellers of penis enlargement pills and vinyl siding wouldn't sell lists of email addresses to Nigerian scammers.

Why is it called "Nigerian Fraud"?
Regardless of the country or countries mentioned in the letter -- even countries located outside of Africa -- the fraudsters are usually from certain families or gangs based in Lagos, Nigeria.

Some relevant books:

News clippings:
The New York Times mentioned this page on February 10, 2003; MSNBC linked to this page on March 5, 2003. Susan Ager of the Detroit Free Press wrote a column about this page, published on February 27, 2003.

Site review:
"As with all new fads, however, some humourless spod has to get involved and start cataloguing things. This guy's site, with its easy-on-the-eye background of snot-green "FRAUD!" logos and list of 500 different Nigerian scam examples, must be one of the most boring things on the internet." From Bad Gas.

More information?
For much more information, see the links at the bottom of this page. Don't miss the fun with the Nigerian scam section!

Comments?
You can share your comments about these frauds at Discuss Nigerian Fraud Email . Or, send comments about this page to webmaster at fraudgallery dot com.


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Nigerian Scam Links:

Fun with the Nigerian Scam:

This page was created by Lawrence Kestenbaum, polygon at potifos dot com.