Quote From: will6012They are not from Nigeria. There is no money. I had a person ask me for advise once I tried to explain to them, but they insisted that they were going to be sent money. I actually played along with a couple of these email scammers, just to see how far they would go.
There are many forms: One of them will send you a check for $7,500 as part of there lure to get at the fake $20 million. You are to keep $2,500 but to send $5,000 to some agent they are working with. This has to be done immediately so you need to deposit the check but send your own money.You just made $2,500. Wrong. There check is bogus and will not clear and you just lost $5,000. The amount will change based on how much they think you can be milked for.
Thee are no get rich plans. It requires hard work and time. You did not all of a sudden become smart. If you did bad in school, you will not get rich,unless you change the time and energy you are willing to invest.
Nobody, in these schemes are dying from cancer, or have relatives that left $20 million in a box. If they were sincere, they would give a name, address and phone number. If they do give this information, then you can do a search. My advise is to simply delete and don't read them. Don't waste your time.
I am in an active search for work from home opportunities, particularly ones that aren't multi level. recently I have been flooded with work from home scams that want me to fill out personal information. I think both of these are the same from the same people. and it seems they only want the personal information to begin identity theft. All they need is to insure you are a real person to start the ball rolling. Do not EVER answer, unsolicited emails, and never ever give out personal info over the Internet. To take it one step further never use your credit cards either. If you shop on line use a prepaid card designated for this purpose only!!
Everyone beware, be cautious never give out personal info that is not available in the phone book!