Hi
Here is another item from the news about internet scams. It appears after all that something is being done to clamp down on net scams.
please read the story and leave your comments.
alan
www.elovedeceptions.com
Federal agents crack down on Internet scams
05:35 PM Mountain Standard Time on Wednesday, October 3, 2007
By Bart Treece / 3 On Your Side Producer It’s one of the biggest scams around and federal agents are finally cracking down.
This scam has gone on for so long. The biggest problem is that the scammers live overseas and the victims live right here, many of them living in Arizona.
Because of the distance, it’s a little hard to crack down on these con artists. Until now, that is.
At a news conference today, federal agents say they have had enough.
Nigerian police, with the help of federal agents, raided Internet cafes in Africa.
As it turns out, the raid is part of a global crackdown on Internet scams.
Altogether, 16 people were arrested for allegedly taking part in fake check scams that target countless Americans.
In Amsterdam, 60 people were taken into custody for doing the exact same thing.
Federal and local authorities announced the crackdown at a news conference in downtown Phoenix.
“American consumers are being defrauded by overseas scam artists,” said Pete Zegarac, a U.S. postal inspector.
The crackdown, they say, actually started by sending American agents overseas to investigate.
“In a 21-day effort alone in Nigeria, postal inspectors oversaw the seizure of 15,000 fake checks,” Zegarac said.
U.S. postal inspector Keith Moore from the Phoenix office was in Nigeria for several weeks and says he saw firsthand how good these scammers are.
“We were able to determine their equipment is first class,” Moore said.
For example, that first-class equipment produces checks that look real.
After you cash it and send some of the proceeds back to the scammer, you later find out the check is fake.
The bait is usually set when you receive an e-mail.
“Two out of three adults receive a potential scam once a week, said Sally Wells with the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. “I have a reliable source because my mother sends them to me about once a week.”
“These scams prey on the elderly and when English is a second language,” said Ann Harwood with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Arizona.
Victims are lured into the scam because easy money is too hard to resist.
Another example, are foreign lotteries claiming you won money. To collect, you cash the fake check and return a portion to the scammer.
“It’s easy for law enforcement to stand up here and say, ‘You won the lottery without even entering. You must be the luckiest person on earth!’” Zegarac said.
Numerous times, law enforcement warn people about these scams and now they have a new tool for you, a Web site called fakechecks.org, which is part of a multi-agency effort to keep your money out of the hands of con artists.
“There’s a lot of feeling there that Americans have a lot of money and they want to target that,” Moore said.
“People fall for it,” Zegarac said. “It’s up to us to get the word out.”
That Web site is also the place to report these scams to law enforcement so they can track down these scammers.