Raven Correspondence School Email

Posted June 29, 2008 

I’ve gotten this damn scam spam about twenty times today. Did Raven Correspondence School (raven@yksd.com) kindly email you yet?

If you get this classic Nigerian scam email, ignore it.

Or send them back a bunch of fake information and make their life hell.

Cheers.

From: Raven Correspondence School (raven@yksd.com)
Subject: PLEASE READ
Date: July 1, 2008 12:05:15 PM PDT
Reply-To: danielsampah@yahoo.co.jp

Dear Friend,

This message might meet you in utmost surprise, First of all I want you to Know that this is not a scam mail.Because based on what is going on all over the internet world, people find it very difficult to believe things like this any more.If you can guarantee me from your own side, your trust,honestly I will be able to work with you.I will appreciate if you can come down your self and see things for your self before we proceed and this will make things clearer for you.

But Why I ‘m sending you this letter, I think if that situation has a place in internet, maybe one out of 1000 has a real fund for transaction.

I, am Barrister Daniel Sampah, a personal lawyer to one late Mr.Ruth Fred Leo An American oil Contractor with the Ivoirien Solid Minerals Corporation, here in Abidjan Ivory Coast who died in an auto Crash in september 2006. later Mr. Ruth Fred leo before his untimely death, made some deposit of funds with a Finance firm here and did not declare any information of any of his relatives to the said fund deposit at the time of deposit.

Where you come in is that I needed your good collaboration to pull out these funds to overseas for investments because, he left with me the deposit information and no body could come around to
lay claim if not I and a foriegner in good collaboration since he did not leave any information of any of his relatives.

I will apprecaite if you can send me the following,

1.Your Full
2.Your current Mobile telephone and fax numbers.
3.Your age.
4.Occupation
5.Your Current address
6.company

Kindly get back to me inorder to bring you to the detail arrangement to
move out the funds accross to your destination.

Kind Regards,
Barrister Daniel Sampah
(legal Practitioners and Advocates

PLEASE DO REPLY ME VIA THIS EMAIL ADDRESS ONLY IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN
ASSISTING ME IN THIS TRANSACTION: danielsampah@yahoo.co.jp

Raven Correspondence School Email Might Be a Nigerian Scam or Advance-Free Fraud

WTF is a Nigerian Scam or Advance-Fee Fraud?

Nigerian scam emails actually began as snail mail and faxes — the way Nigerian scams work is less about technology, and more about gaining your confidence and taking advantage of your compassion.

Thank god I don’t have a heart, eh?

A Nigerian scam — AKA an advance-fee fraud — is more formulaic than a Brangelina movie. Here’s the typical story: you receive an email from a loaded government official or legal representative of someone wealthy who has recently died. The funds of this scam character need to be transferred out of the country for whatever reason, and if as a “dear Christian brother or sister” you help them do this, you’ll be “most blessed” with a large chunk of change (usually 40-50% of millions).

Yeah, even though they never met you.

If you reply saying you’re in, the scammer lays out the plan: it usually involves you filling out faked government forms, then wiring the scammer some money to bribe an official or two to get the funds out of the country. Once you get involved, the scammer will keep telling you they need just a little bit more money for this, a few more thousand for that, and that your reward will increase with your patience.

Or the scammer’ll just wire even more cash out of your bank account without telling you and flee./

Laid out just so, the Nigerian scam seems too obvious, right? Unfortunately, it’s human nature that once you’ve invested in something, you’ll want to see the deal through. And it doesn’t hurt a Nigerian scammer’s business that in extreme cases, you can be sincerely threatened you if you try to bail on the deal.

Rule of thumb: if it sounds too good to be true, it is.

However, I’m still waiting for my Russian bride to arrive in the mail.

True love that costs a couple hundred pounds is the exception to my rule.

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