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Archive for the ‘I.T fraud / Cybercrime’ Category

419 Mosquito Zapper Killer seller on Nairalist.com: part-2

Posted by Admin on July 10, 2009

nairalist_scam2

While it appears(above) that our Nairalist.com admin has removed the link to the fraudulent advert which I mentioned in this post, the dupe in question is still peddling his wares on Nairalist.

I searched Nairalist with the 0803-8715926 phone-number of Mr. George. He has the following for sale scam as well:

Its unbelievable, that the guy who ran away with NGN6,000(six thousand Naira) paid into his bank account, and who didn’t deliver on his promise of a mosquito repellant now has filling stations for sale, in Nigeria for that matter. Wow!!

Mr. George has also upgraded on his operations to include additional contact phone numbers: 08032963972, 08067768338, 07088378142. The worst thing about this guy is that should you call these numbers one after the other from different phones, Geroge-o-dupe doesn’t have a clue of who called him last.

nairalist_scam3

http://www.nairalist.com/search?q=08038715926

A commenter in my earlier post also claims being duped after trying to purchase electronics items from references found in Waseet, a free 8-page advert filled paper distributed once a week.

Update on earlier post: LD called Oceanic Bank and even went back to the branch where he deposited money into George-O-dupe’s account, presented the deposit slip, etc, and ‘nothing was / could be done’ according to the Oceanic bank officers spoken to:

  • Mr George-O-dupes account details: address etc, wasn’t and couldn’t be provided to LD without Mr. George’s consent. True, but what about the complaint? nothing could be done.
  • Oceanic banks officers couldn’t read in between the lines – check / correlate the activity in the account positively or negatively – and verify if / whether the complaint was genuine or not,
  • the money paid in could not be retrieved, or deducted from the existing balance of the account holder – at least to force him to call the bank / visit the branch to resolve issues with LD?
  • etc, etc, considering the Nigerian Police is as unreliable as NEPA, and can’t be trusted.

The conclusion of the matter was that Oceanic bank wasn’t responsible for how a customer uses his account, either for profitable or fraudulent purposes.

Question: a scammer opens an account in a bank for his scam-loot. Can the bank take action on the account based on a report from a scammed-victim?

Lets discuss!!!

Posted in I.T fraud / Cybercrime, Nigeria, Nigerian Banks, advance fee fraud, money matters | Leave a Comment »

Guaranty Trust Bank Plc – Your Account Identification Has Been Change or Incomplete Scam-mail – MUST READ

Posted by Admin on July 6, 2009

Below is a screen-shot of a scam mail I received with the above (less ’scam – Must Read) as the mail subject.

Now listen carefully, this is a scam, so don’t click reply if you see such in your mailbox as it looks very much truthful.

 

gtbscam_pic_1: Original email scam mail

gtbank6

 

The ‘from’ mail-addr is online@gtbplc.com.

With the interesting part of this scam-mail as the https://ibank.gtbank.com…URL,  I started by checking out the correct ‘Internet banking URL’ of GT Bank Plc.

 

See the next screenshot.

gtbscam_pic_2: GTB PLC authentic website screen-shot.

gtbank1

 

where #1 is the http://www.gtbplc.com URL,

where#2 is the ‘Internet Banking Login’ link, and

where#3 is https://ibank.gtbank.com, a Scam Alert by GTB, as a pop-up window, after clicking the Internet banking Login URL.

 

Looking closely,

#3 is from internet explorer:

gtbscam_pic_3

gtbank8

 

and this next one is from Mozilla Firefox. I’m using v5.0

gtbscam_pic_4

gtbank7

 

Please note that the above screen-shot(gtbscam_pic_4) via Mozilla Firefox is the exact same URL/weblink in my email.

Here is a zoom-in in view:

gtbscam_pic_5

gtbank3

 

I decided to check out the bottom of the scam-email page and saw this. This is from gmail:

gtbscam_pic_6

gtbank4

 

FYI, Calhountech.com sells used computers and network hardware: computers, servers, cisco, Sun Dell, etc. As of this writing, this is the screenshot of their buisness webpage:

gtbscam_pic_7

gtbank5

Please note that http://calhountech.com/webtree/ibank_gtbplc_com.php presently results in a ‘requested URL not found’ error message:

gtbscam_pic_9

gtbank10

I would rather not point fingers on this one. At the beginning of last month, I received a similar one on my yahoo mail-box and heres another, totally different URL:

gtbscam_pic_10

gtbank11

 

Hunt Essential Fish Fantastic caters through an exclusive club for the elite hunter and fisherman who in particular want to hunt and or fish at premier African destinations.

so what can we conclude?

Could all these genuine websites have been hacked into? - some hacker must be laughing his way around – while he has located his fraudulent weblink and pages in various webservers, and is still fine-tunning his skills, etc, for greater damages?

 

whatever it is, beware!!!

Posted in I.T fraud / Cybercrime, Nigeria, Nigerian Banks, Nigerian Websites, money matters | 1 Comment »

40 Nigerians Arrested In US Over Alleged N1.7 Billion Credit Card Scam

Posted by Admin on May 16, 2009

40 Nigerians Arrested In US Over Alleged N1.7 Billion Credit Card Scam

FG Protests Bid To Name Nationals In The Fraud

From Laolu Akande, New York
AS the authorities in New York City, United States engaged in what seems a mass arrest of Nigerians allegedly involved in a series of financial and identity crimes earlier this week, the Federal Government through the New York Consulate is protesting the decision to name the nationalities of the alleged culprits only when it is about Nigerians.

Already, no fewer than 40 Nigerians based in New York metropolitan area are among 45 people arrested on Thursday in what New York City authorities called the dismantling of an “international credit card and identity fraud ring’.

A statement from the District Attorney’s office for Queens County (under New York City) late on Thursday said in the last one year alone, this group of Nigerians and their American collaborators have engaged in fraud estimated at $12 million (N1.7billion).

About 22 of the over 40 alleged criminals have already been arraigned at a New York Supreme Court.

However, the Federal Government has responded through the Consul General at the Nigerian Consulate in New York , Mr. Ibrahim Auwalu who said New York authorities are yet to alert the Nigerian Embassy about the developments. He added that once the Nigerian Embassy is alerted and informed by the New York authorities, the embassy will seek to have access to the detained Nigerians and “confirm their bonafides.”

Auwalu said if they were indeed Nigerians, the embassy would indeed visit them in detention, adding: “We owe them that responsibility as Nigerians”.

But the New York authorities in an investigation involving city lawyers, cops and detectives from New York Police Department and other agencies, disclosed that nearly “four dozen individuals” have been charged after a 21-month investigation, where counterfeit credit cards were used to steal money.

Queens District Attorney, Richard A. Brown, joined by Police Commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, on Thursday announced the indictment and busting of 45 people in the international forged credit card and identity theft ring based in the New York metropolitan area “with roots in Nigeria.”

Auwalu wondered why so much is being made of the involvement of Nigerians when Americans and people from other parts of the world are also indicted.

He said “it is only when Nigerians are involved that we hear about the nationalities of the alleged culprits”, asking why the origin of Bernie Maddoff who stole over $50billion of other people’s money, was never mentioned.

Defending Nigeria’s name in all of this, Auwalu observed that it has already been established that Nigerians in the US are the most educated immigrant group and even the most educated of all ethnic groups in America. However, he lamented that people don’t focus on this.

He added: “What bothers me is that when others commit crimes in this country, we don’t hear their nationalities, but they keep mentioning Nigerians. What they don’t say about us is that we have tens of thousands of Nigerian professionals in the medical profession doing important live-saving work here.”

Detailing the operation of the crime rings, however, District Attorney and the New York Police Commissioner said they comprise of three separate identity theft and forged credit card groups that employ multiple cells that are “alleged to have been responsible for stealing the credit cards and personal credit information of thousands of American and Canadian consumers, costing these individuals, as well as financial institutions and retail businesses, more than $12 million in losses over the past year alone.”

District Attorney Brown said: “In terms of just the sheer number of people indicted – this is one of the largest identity theft networks uncovered in recent history and is just possibly the tip of a much larger global credit card trafficking operation.”

He added that “technological advances have made it increasingly easier to carry out identity theft and fraud – two of the fastest growing crimes in the US and which afflicts millions of victims and costs billions of dollars in losses to consumers, businesses and financial institutions.”

Brown noted that as part of the investigation, court-authorized search warrants were executed earlier in the week in New York at 17 locations and resulted in the recovery of forged credit cards, credit reports, machines used to stamp credit card account information onto cards and nearly $100,000 in cash.

According to the statement, some of the defendants are alleged to have activated consumers’ credit cards by utilizing “Spoof Cards” which allow a caller to disguise the telephone number they’re calling from and even their voice and gender.

“From a law enforcement perspective, such cards are anything but a spoof. They are virtually untraceable and can be used by identity thieves and hackers to pose as government and financial entities as a means to unscrupulously obtain personal information from unsuspecting consumers and also by defendants in domestic violence cases to harass their victims, ” Brown said.

source: click here

 

 

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