Welcome and happy reading!

Since, like anyone else, I receive tons of scam emails and snail mail letters, I decided to present here some of these. All of these (and many more which I just delete) are scams. This means, what the senders have in mind is to racket one of us. And according to what I've seen, they do succeed quite often.

If you have similar letters in your mailbox, either disregard or play with the person knowing that you can't give him (or her) any information about:

  1. Your bank account,
  2. Your address — or any valid address if that matter,
  3. Your family, and
  4. any other information that you judge private or even intimate.

Ha! I say "Your"... even if you don't like your neighbor at all, don't give his information either. The Internet leaves tracks (hackers in the US are being caught one after another!) and you would certainly be in even bigger trouble.

In the meantime, I hope you will enjoy reading these letters as I do myself once in a while. 8-)I do not always add comments with the letters since I usually don't have time to do so, but there would often be a lot of joke to tell!

Soap Bubbles

 

Latest Scams
  • Last update: 10/31/2009

    Today, someone sent me an email about Hendricks. Nice name for a Sergeant, I guess...

    Hi Alexis,

    I came across your site while researching Sgt Hendricks. I notice you have nothing up on Saddam's millions scam. I have enclosed on of his original posts and his last email to me asking for my personal address and phone number etc.

    regards,

    xxxxxxx xxxxx
    xxxxx
    West Australia

    Hello My Dear

     
  • Last update: 11/01/2009

    Okay... let's say I'm currently looking for a job. I receive this email and think: wow! 8% of 1 million is US $80,000! Of course, I want that kind of a salary (well most people would want such a salary.)

     
  • Last update: 10/31/2009
    Received:	from netscape616.com
    		by substitute with [XMail 1.22 ESMTP Server]
    		id <S7E7A> for <alexis@m2osw.com>
    		from <florincemaitama@netscape.net>;
    		Wed, 14 Jun 2006 04:00:56 -0700
    From:		Florince <florincemaitama@netscape.net>
    To:		alexis@m2osw.com
    Reply-To:	maitama_maitama@yahoo.com
    Subject:	URGENT REPLY
    Date:		Wed, 14 Jun 2006 13:02:32 +0200
    MIME-Version:	1.0
    Content-Type:	multipart/mixed; boundary="a1dc3788-1da2-4852-be1c-788e1998a31b"
    
    Dear Friend
    Greetings to you in the most wonderful name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
    His richest blessings shal
     
  • Last update: 11/01/2009

    Nothing upstairs... what does that mean?! That I'm an idiot?

     
  • Last update: 10/31/2009

    La Reine Franca. Moui... Au Canada, on a des reines?

     
  • Last update: 10/01/2019

    I've seen a lot of things and I have to say that these scams have been evolving really fast in the last 2 or 3 years. At first, it was just something like my dad died (and you still get those), but this one is much different. This one is about a guy who put my name in his will. Imagine that. He dies, I get some money. Cool. US $1 million. And no phone call, no letter, no angry siblings, just an email. Hmmm... Is that a scam?!

     
  • Last update: 07/06/2017

    I have see a lot of toll free numbers, but one that starts with 334 does not really sound free to me. What seems surprising is that this looks like an American phone number; Albama to be precise. (see Wikipedia for more info) I'm not too sure what the intend is here. Go to jail? Or would the number redirect to another number? Or that's the number of a stolen cell phone maybe.


    Return-Path:		<online@colonialbank.com>
    X-Original-To:		alexis@halk.m2osw.com
    Delivered-To:		alexis@halk.m2osw.com
    Received:		from mail.m2osw.com (jcolo [69.55.238.181])
    			by halk.m2osw.com ...
     
  • Last update: 10/31/2009

    Cool! Look at the subject! Why not right away say what you're up to, hey?! 8-)

     
  • Last update: 10/31/2009
    X-Apparently-To:		alexis_wilke@yahoo.com via 206.190.38.198; Sun, 30 May 2004 14:27:41 -0700
    Return-Path:			<edy_chambers@3xl.net>
    Received:			from 66.35.250.206 (EHLO sc8-sf-mx1.sourceforge.net) (66.35.250.206)
    				by mta118.mail.sc5.yahoo.com with SMTP; Sun, 30 May 2004 14:27:40 -0700
    Received:			from 120.ccrtvi.com ([213.229.186.120] helo=webmail1.ccrtvi.com)
    				by sc8-sf-mx1.sourceforge.net with esmtp (TLSv1:DES-CBC3-SHA:168) (Exim 4.30)
    				id 1BUXqF-0003y0-Ma; Sun, 30 May 2004 14:27:40 -0700
    Received:			from 3xl.net (localhost [127.0.0.1])
    				by webmail1.ccrtvi.com (8.12.8/
     
  • Last update: 10/31/2009

    I thought this one was interesting because from the first instance, I looked at the domain name and it was off line. Whether the registrar managing that domain turned it off or the owner, I do not know but the fact is a dig -x onlinesuitesecure.com returned nothing. And no IP means no risk to connect to anything...

    The full destination link was to: http://onlinesuitesecure.com/406.htm