If you're using the Internet:
Know who you're dealing with.
In any electronic transaction,
independently confirm the other
party's name, street address,
and telephone number.
Resist the urge to enter
foreign lotteries. These
solicitations are phony and
illegal.
Delete requests that claim
to be from foreign nationals
asking you to help transfer
their money through your bank
account. They're fraudulent.
Ignore unsolicited emails
that request your money, credit
card or account numbers, or
other personal information.
If you are selling something
over the Internet, don't accept
a potential buyer's offer to
send you a check for more than
the purchase price, no matter
how tempting the plea or
convincing the story. End the
transaction immediately if
someone insists that you wire
back funds.
The Internet gives buyers access to a
world of goods and services, and gives
sellers access to a world of customers.
Unfortunately, the Internet also gives
con artists the very same access. But
being on guard online can help you
maximize the global benefits of
electronic commerce and minimize your
chance of being defrauded. Sofware World
wants you to know how to spot some
cross-border scams — including foreign
lotteries, money offers, and check
overpayment schemes — and report them to
the appropriate authorities.
Foreign Lotteries
For years, scam operators have used
the telephone and direct mail to entice
U.S. consumers into buying chances in
supposedly high-stakes foreign lotteries.
Now they're using email, too — either to
sell tickets or suggest that a large
cash prize has your name on it. No
matter what country's name is used to
promote a lottery, the pitch follows a
pattern: you should send money to pay
for taxes, insurance, or processing or
customs fees. The amount may seem small
at first, but as long as you keep paying,
the requests for funds will keep coming —
for higher and higher amounts. Some
victims have lost thousands of dollars.
Most scam operators never buy the
lottery tickets on your behalf. Others
buy some tickets, but keep the "winnings"
for themselves. In any case, lottery
hustlers generally try to get you to
share your bank account or credit card
numbers, so they can make unauthorized
withdrawals.
If you're thinking about responding
to a foreign lottery, Sofware World
wants you to remember:
- Playing a foreign lottery is
against the law.
- There are no secret systems for
winning foreign lotteries. Your
chances of getting any money back
are slim to none.
- If you buy even one foreign
lottery ticket, you can expect many
more bogus offers for lottery or
investment "opportunities." Your
name will be placed on "sucker lists"
that fraudsters buy and sell.
- Keep your credit card and bank
account numbers to yourself. Scam
artists often ask for them during an
unsolicited sales pitch. Once they
get your account numbers, they may
use them to commit identity theft.
Resist solicitations for
foreign lottery promotions.
"Nigerian" Foreign Money Offers
The "Nigerian" scam got its name from
emails that supposedly came from
Nigerian "officials" who needed your
help getting at their money — which was
tied up due to strife in their country.
Today, people claiming to be officials,
businesspeople, or the surviving
relatives of former government honchos
in countries around the world send
countless offers via email to transfer
thousands of dollars into your bank
account if you will just pay a fee or "taxes"
to help them access their money. If you
respond to the initial offer, you may
receive documents that look "official."
But then, you will get more email asking
you to send more money to cover
transaction and transfer costs,
attorney's fees, blank letterhead, and
your bank account numbers, among other
information. Subsequent emails will
encourage you to travel to another
country to complete the transaction.
Some fraudsters have even produced
trunks of dyed or stamped money to
verify their claims.
The emails are from crooks trying to
steal your money or commit identity
theft. Victims of this scam report that
emergencies arise that require more
money and delay the "transfer" of funds;
in the end, you lose your money, and the
scam artist vanishes. According to the
U.S. State Department, people who have
responded to these solicitations have
been beaten, subjected to threats and
extortion, and in some cases, murdered.
If you receive an email from
someone claiming to need your help
getting money out of another country,
don't respond. After all, why
would a stranger from another country
pick you out at random to share
thousands of dollars?
Check Overpayment Schemes
Say no to a check for more
than your selling price, no matter how
tempting the plea or convincing the
story. Check overpayment
schemes generally target people who have
posted an item for sale online. The con
artist, posing as a potential buyer from
a foreign country (or a distant part of
the U.S.), emails the seller and offers
to buy the item with a cashier's check,
money order, personal check, or
corporate check. Or the scammer may
pretend to be a business owner from a
foreign country, needing "financial
agents" to process payments for their
U.S. orders; in exchange, they promise a
commission.
Regardless of the cover, here's what
happens: The scammer sends you a check
that looks authentic — complete with
watermarks — made payable for more money
than you expected. They ask you to
deposit it in your bank account, and
then wire-transfer some portion of the
funds to a foreign account. They provide
convincing reasons why the check is for
more than the necessary amount, and why
the funds must be transferred quickly.
Sometimes, the counterfeit checks fool a
bank teller, but be aware that the check
still can bounce. The scammer vanishes
with the money you wired from your own
account and you are on the hook for the
entire amount of the worthless check. In
addition, a scammer who has your bank
account number is likely to use it to
withdraw more money from your account.
Reporting a Cross-Border Scam
If you think you may have responded
to a cross-border scam, file a complaint
at
www.econsumer.gov, a project of 20
countries of the
International Consumer Protection and
Enforcement Network. Then visit the
FTC's identity theft website at
www.ftc.gov/idtheft. While you can't
completely control whether you will
become a victim of identity theft, you
can take some steps to minimize your
risk.
If you've responded to a "Nigerian"
scheme, contact your local Secret
Service field office using contact
information from the Blue Pages of your
telephone directory, or from
www.secretservice.gov/field_offices.shtml.
In addition, report telemarketing
fraud and check overpayment scams to
your state Attorney General, using
contact information at
www.naag.org.
Report unsolicited email offers to
spam@uce.gov — including offers
inviting you to participate in a foreign
lottery, looking for help getting money
out of a foreign country, or asking you
to wire back extra funds from a check
you received.
If you receive what looks like
lottery material from a foreign country
through the postal mail, give it to your
local postmaster.
For More Information
Foreign Lottery Scams
U.S. Federal Trade Commission —
The FTC works for the consumer to
prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and
unfair business practices in the
marketplace and to provide information
to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid
them. To file a complaint or to get free
information on consumer issues, visit
www.ftc.gov or call toll-free,
1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY:
1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet,
telemarketing, identity theft, and other
fraud-related complaints into Consumer
Sentinel, a secure, online database
available to hundreds of civil and
criminal law enforcement agencies in the
U.S. and abroad.
Competition Bureau in Canada —
The Competition Bureau is an independent
law enforcement agency in Canada that
investigates anti-competitive practices
and promotes compliance with the laws
under its jurisdiction. To file a
complaint or to get free information,
visit
www.competitionbureau.gc.ca or call
toll-free, 1-800-348-5358. The Bureau
has the ability to refer criminal
matters to the Attorney General of
Canada, who then decides whether to
prosecute before the courts.
United Kingdom's Office of Fair
Trading — The United
Kingdom's Office of Fair Trading is
responsible for making markets work well
for consumers. They protect and promote
consumer interests throughout the United
Kingdom, while ensuring that businesses
are fair and competitive. To file a
complaint or to get free information,
visit
www.oft.gov.uk or send an email to
enquiries@oft.gsi.gov.uk.
Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission — The
Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission encourages vigorous
competition in the marketplace and
enforces consumer protection and fair
trading laws. To file a complaint or to
get more information, visit
www.accc.gov.au. The ACCC advocates
consultation and negotiation as the
first and best option to settle disputes,
but once the ACCC pursues legal action
any sort of mediation becomes less
likely.
"Nigerian" Advance-Fee Scams
U.S. Secret Service —
The Secret Service investigates
violations of laws relating to financial
crimes, including access device fraud,
financial institution fraud, identity
theft, and computer fraud. To file a
complaint or to get free information,
visit
www.secretservice.gov or call
202-406-5708.
U.S. Department of State —
The Department of State's mission is to
create a more secure, democratic, and
prosperous world for the benefit of the
American people and the international
community. As part of that mission, the
Department of State seeks to minimize
the impact of international crime,
including cross-border internet scams,
on the United States and its citizens.
To get free information, visit
www.state.gov