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he said that i have 4 method transfer by dhl,by ups,by fedex and by bank .each one cost mony what can i do

2007-11-30 01:32:32 · 51 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

51 answers

Delete the email! Its a con to get your bank details! Dont fall for it!

2007-11-30 01:35:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

it's a scam! i hate it. u have to be true to urself in which doesn't begin and end with money.haven't u seen the commercial in which a man is worse off then the person being offered the doe?court tv has shown young adults who can't have credit or a bank account 'cause they owe the bank for these scams u have to cover it hence the to good to be true offer of a life time comes out ur ***

2007-11-30 01:43:08 · answer #2 · answered by Susan V 2 · 1 0

If ANYONE is asking for money up front before you get anything, should tell you it's a scam. Red flag it and don't give them any info about yourself. Especially if you personally didn't buy any tickets or entered a lottery. People just don't give cash away. You won't like the end results

2007-11-30 01:43:57 · answer #3 · answered by snowcell77@rogers.com 2 · 1 0

Do not do it unless you would like to be arrested for money laundering or have your identity stolen. The type of email you have recieved is a common scam used by people overseas to launder illegally gotten cash and to steal a person's identity. Save your money and invest in a local lottery ticket.

2007-11-30 01:36:59 · answer #4 · answered by jerofjungle 5 · 0 1

The same thing happened to my daughter exactly one year ago.I had told her to watch out for scams such as this one. She didn't listen to me so this is what happened.which is a little bit different from your situation. This guy got in contact with her and told her he was going to wire $1000.00 to her account he needed her to send it to him and for doing him this favor he would wire her another thousand to keep for herself then . So when she checked her bank account she saw that a thousand dollars indeed had been posted to her account. So she sent it and the bank ended up putting a hold on her account after the thousand had been deducted which turned out to be fraud. I would check with the BBB before I sent any money.If you won money you should not have to spend money. I would tell them to take it out of my winnings. Also I am assuming that they got in touch with you and you did not solicit them

2007-11-30 02:13:29 · answer #5 · answered by highlightedsista 1 · 0 1

This is a big fat hoax and you just need to delete the email. I get at least one of these a day and sometimes two. If you send them your banking info, they will use it to clean out your account.

2007-11-30 01:37:11 · answer #6 · answered by Laura H 3 · 1 0

It's a scam, period .You didn’t enter a lottery, and YAHOO isn’t running a lottery. All you are going to win is an empty bank account and more trouble than you ever dreamed of. Possibly a “courier” bill for a few thousand to “deliver” a “prize” you’ll never see.g. If you want to bother, forward the fraudulent email to phishing@cc.yahoo-inc.com, spam@uce.gov, and 419.fcd@usss.treas.gov.

FBI: http://www.fbi.gov/

FTC: http://www.ftc.gov/

2007-11-30 01:35:16 · answer #7 · answered by wizjp 7 · 6 1

Here's the easy solution.....ask yourself..."Have I ever entered an online lottery?"

The answer should come pretty easy.....ignore the person, or people telling you this garbage, it seems an attempt to get your banking information.

2007-11-30 01:38:03 · answer #8 · answered by Chris 3 · 1 0

You do nothing. It is a scam to get your personal information to steal your identity and clean out your bank account. Everyone gets these things all the time.

2007-11-30 01:36:02 · answer #9 · answered by Sparkles 7 · 1 1

Its a scam Ignore it and dont give out your bank details

2007-11-30 01:36:52 · answer #10 · answered by Branded 3 · 1 0

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