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I will answer this for you as I have others that have been taken by this scam. Free Lotto is a scam run out a P.O. Box at Grand Central Station in N.Y. by Plasma Net. It is a credit card scam and if you do receive a check from them it will be for less than a dollar and will bounce. Give them nothing. Once they have your credit card number they will draw money from that account monthly with or without your permission. I am a retired Police Officer that as a hobby investigates Internet fraud and scams. Free Lotto is one of the biggest. The most common source of them getting your email address is from Internet survey companies. They sell your email address. If Free Lotto has your email you, without a doubt, will be receiving more scams through your email. Free Lotto is part of a international criminal network. Unfortunately the N.Y. Attorney General finds no reason to investigate them. Go to www.ripoffreport.com and enter the search words "Free Lotto" and you will meet hundreds that have been scammed. Call your local F.B.I. and ask for their email to forward the scam email. Advise them if you are a victim or not. In Los Angeles it is los.angeles@ic.fbi.gov. The closest FBI to you will most likely have the city has the first word of their Internet fraud email address. If you have already given the credit card number you have a limited amount of time to notify your bank. Here is the name of the CEO of PlasmaNet and his address and phone number; Kevin J. Aronin 20 Echo Bay pl. New Rochelle New York (914) 654-8900 Good Luck

2006-12-07 14:50:12 · answer #1 · answered by ohbrother 7 · 3 0

If you don't remember entering it, you have no email from this particular site before in your email history...don't click on any "links" just yet, instead, go to the main area of the site and check it out from there...see if it rings any bells for you...

Is the "prize" a decent one...money, car whatever? Check out through the front door of the site before clicking on any link they included in the email...it could be just a way of getting your email to verify that it is active so that they can innundate you with spam

Good luck

2006-12-07 02:23:40 · answer #2 · answered by dustiiart 5 · 0 0

No they trick you with questions on your handle and economic enterprise suggestions--very own indentification numbers and stuff--then they have stolen your existence, utilising credits on your call--the fees come to you. DON"T BE SO stupid to speak to THEM--they tell zillions of those that they are winners--they actually do get fools to have confidence it.

2016-10-17 22:45:15 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Nothing

The message is an email fraud, designed to clean out your bank account.

2006-12-07 02:20:33 · answer #4 · answered by Chief BaggageSmasher 7 · 0 0

If I were you I would throw it away. It could be a scam.

Be very careful of unsolicited mail!

Hope this helps.

God Bless....

2006-12-07 02:21:01 · answer #5 · answered by ye 4 · 0 0

You don't have to do anything, the 24th of November has already passed. Better luck next time! :)

2006-12-07 02:20:26 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

send them an e mail tell them each to blow there brains out nothing more than a SCAM

2006-12-07 02:21:18 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

just forget it.
if you click the link to collect it, you are inviting trouble (washout your bank balance)

2006-12-07 02:27:51 · answer #8 · answered by ri_ma_bo 4 · 0 0

send me £50 admin fee.

2006-12-07 02:20:42 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Forget it, Its a scam or one can say fraud

2006-12-07 02:35:10 · answer #10 · answered by Harinder S. Johal 7 · 0 0

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