Tips on How to Identify a Scam or Fraud
If the email, phone call, prize or lottery notification has any of the following elements, we strongly suggest it is probably a fraud and you do not respond to it. Below are some general tips to recognize scams. Detailed information can be found from the menu buttons at left:
It may seem like the wheels of justice turn slowly, but scammers are being caught and convicted all the time! Here is a list of individuals who have been indicted and scammers who have been convicted!
If the email, phone call, prize or lottery notification has any of the following elements, we strongly suggest it is probably a fraud and you do not respond to it. Below are some general tips to recognize scams. Detailed information can be found from the menu buttons at left:
- The name of the company is listed on this website somewhere as a scam.
- The email matches one of the definitions or formats on this website.
- The organization has no website and can not be located in Google.
- The email or requestor asks for bank account information, credit card numbers, driver's license numbers, passport numbers, your mother's maiden name or other personal information.
- The email or caller advises that you have won a prize - but you did not enter any competition run by the prize promoters.
- The email claims you won a lottery (we know of NO legal lottery that notifies winners by email)
- The mail may be personally addressed to you but it has been posted using bulk mail - thousands of others around the world may have received the exact same notification. Especially true if you find an exact or similar email posted on this website.
- The return address is a yahoo, hotmail, excite.com or other free email accounts. Legitimate companies can afford the roughly $100 per year that it costs to acquire and maintain a domain and related company email account.
- The literature contains a lot of hype and exaggerations, but few specific details about costs, your obligations, how it works, etc.
- The prize promoters ask for a fee (for administration, "processing", taxes, etc.) to be paid in advance. A legitimate lottery simply deducts that from the winnings!
- The scheme offers bait prizes that, if they are real, are often substandard, over-priced, or falsely represented. Or, as part of the prize you can purchase "exclusive items" which may also be over-priced or substandard.
- To get your prize might require travel overseas at your own cost (and personal risk) to receive it.
It may seem like the wheels of justice turn slowly, but scammers are being caught and convicted all the time! Here is a list of individuals who have been indicted and scammers who have been convicted!
- Rover Car Parts Scam - David Wardell who worked at a Land Rover Plant and his brother-in-law, Darren Holloway ran a Land Rover parts scam. The Land Rover employee bought car parts that had been stolen from the company's Solihull plant at boot sales before selling them on eBay. Wardell (32), of Cedar Drive, West Heath, Birmingham, pleaded guilty at Warwick Crown Court to handling stolen parts. Holloway (40), of Fulbrook Close, Weoley Castle, also admitted handling the parts and was given a community order with 200 hours of unpaid work.
- Flu Shots Scam - May 1, 2007 - Iyad Abu El Hawa, 36, pleaded guilty in September and was sentenced to 4 years in a flu shot scam. He was charged with health care fraud and drug misbranding in connection with fake shots given during a health fair at the Baytown refinery. El Hawa was a citizen of Palestine who came to the U.S. from Israel 13 years ago, and will be deported after completing his sentence. His co-defendant, Martha Denise Gonzales, also plead guilty last September. Instead of vaccine, the syringes were filled with sterile water and marked with phony bar codes. The fake flu vaccine was injected into more than 1,100 Exxon Mobil employees over two days in October 2005.
- Stock investment scam - Pump-and-Dump - John P. Tomkins is accused of threatening harm to two mutual fund companies unless they bought shares of Navarre Corp. and 3Com Corp. The alleged letter-writing scam was meant to persuade investment companies to inflate the price of publicly-traded companies in which he had invested. Had it worked, it could have netted the machinist an unknown profit.
- Mail Fraud / False debits - April 25, 2007 - The company,"NorCal CSI", Kenneth Cervellin, 61, plead guilty to one count of mail fraud and his son, Ronald Cervellin, plead guilty to one count of concealing knowledge of a felony Tuesday in a scheme that defrauded about 1,200 customers out of more than $200,000, authorities said. They defrauded CSI customers by debiting $25 from their accounts without their knowledge, the release states. If a customer complained, the money was returned and the file marked so the account would not be debited again. Kenneth Cervellin faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, and Ronald Cervellin faces up to three years in prison.