Watertown News reports (scroll down) on a case of a man who thought he'd found a love connection online, to whom he sent $4,200, ostensibly to help her sort out her father's estate, then started getting threatening calls from people claiming to be Justice Department agents who said he'd sent money to a terrorist organization, so he'd better pay them even more to keep from going to prison. And then there were the calls from Guyanese lottery officials.
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Looking for love in all the
By anon
Sun, 05/02/2021 - 12:07pm
Looking for love in all the wromg places.
Ouch...
By Friartuck
Sun, 05/02/2021 - 12:16pm
That would've covered a whole bunch of martinis and delicious Greek food at the now departed Aegean restaurant.
Elder financial scams are a reality.
scammers
By onelith
Sun, 05/02/2021 - 12:20pm
I miss the Nigerian Prince scams from years ago! The Prince needs your help getting money out of his country.
There are more and more scammers around,
By mplo
Sun, 05/02/2021 - 4:01pm
and they're getting wilier, smarter, more diabolical, and more dangerous, to boot. That's why I've never used an online dating service, and why, if I see a phone number, a person's name, or place that I don't recognize on my caller I. D, that I don't answer my phone. If I see any email that's suspicious, I delete it-pronto!
Yeah, they're getting more believable, too
By Tim Mc.
Mon, 05/03/2021 - 8:44am
The scam callers will do their research on you first -- name, address, even birthday and names of relatives. They'll spoof the caller ID to some local police or government name and number or even just 911 (never trust caller ID or even the calling phone number, it is easily faked!) and start hammering hard and fast to provoke fear and anxiety, which suppress rational response, and keep you from contacting anyone else (since that would reveal the scam).
That's why, if a phone number, name, place, etc.
By mplo
Mon, 05/03/2021 - 12:31pm
That's precisely why, if a name, phone number, place, etc., comes up on your caller I. D., that you don't answer the telephone. Having caller I. D. is a very good way of protecting against scamming.
Lots of experience with scammers
By Russ
Mon, 05/03/2021 - 12:37pm
My number is on a Craigslist ad for a service, so I get all kinds of scammers. Quite often the phone number will match the first 6 numbers in mine, which makes me instantaneously suspicious, but I'm Mr. Skeptic anyway. They move on pretty quickly after ascertaining I'm a poor mark.
brik pan brik:
By schneidz
Mon, 05/03/2021 - 7:18am
https://m.soundcloud.com/skillibeng/brik-pan-brik
It happens
By Bob Leponge
Mon, 05/03/2021 - 2:00pm
If you think that only a moron would fall for a scam... ... some scams are very sophisticated. I have heard of targeted “spear phishing” exploits that got as much as a 40% catch rate... among professional employees of a major bank.
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