Miss Young

Hello, I am Miss Young. I received the following email. It is a socalled "Advance Fee Fraud" letter, where I am promised millions for my assistance. These stories are all lies, and if I respond, sooner or later I will be asked to pay a fee. If I pay, another fee will quickly come up, and it will continue that way until I give up or run out of money. I will never see the millions, because they never existed.

If you received a similar email, you should go to the homepage to read more about 419 fraud.


Mr
From: Mrs. Jane Taylor < mrsjanetaylor@consultant.com >
Date: Sat, Jan 28, 2012 at 7:38 PM
Subject: I AWAIT FOR YOUR QUICK RESPONSE.


My Dear Friend,

I am Mrs. Jane Taylor. Accountant of one of the Bank' s here in London-England. I am contacting you in regards to a transfer of a Huge sum of money from a deceased account. That was deposited in our bank here in London-United Kingdom, Though I know that a transaction of this magnitude will make any one apprehensive and worried, but I am assuring you that all will be well at the end of the day. I decided to contact you due to the urgency of this transaction.we discovered an abandoned sum of US$116,500,000.00 (One Hundred and sixteen Million five Hundred Thausand US Dollars) in an account that belongs to one of our foreign customers who died along with his entire family. Since his death, none of his next-of-kin or relations has come forward to lay claims to this money as the heir. We cannot release the fund from his account unless someone applies for claim as the next-of-kin to the deceased as indicated in our banking guidelines.Upon this discovery, I now seek your permission to have you stand as a next of kin to the deceased as all documentations will becarefully worked out by me for the funds US$116,500,000.00) to be released in your favor as the beneficiary' s next of kin. It may interest you to note that we have secured from the probate an order of mandamus to locate any of deceased beneficiaries.Please acknowledge receipt of this message in acceptance of my mutual business endeavor by furnishing me with the following

1.Your full Name:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.Direct Telephone No:. . . . . . . . . . . .
3.Home Address:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .


These requirements will enable me file a letter of claim to the appropriate departments for necessary approvals in your favor before the transfer can be made. After the money have been transferred to your account, you shall be entitling for 40% while 10% will go for any expenses you made during the transaction while the rest 50% shall be for me.If you find yourself able to work with me, contact me only through my confidential email address (mrs.janetaylor@accountant.com ) And the private phone number I shall provide in recipient of your response to my proposal. This is because my official lines are not totally secure lines as they are periodically monitored to assess our level of customer care in line with our Total  Quality Management Policy. Note that the transaction is risk free because nobody knows about the transaction except me Please observe this instruction religiously. I send you this mail not without a measure of fear as to what the consequences may be, but I know within me that nothing ventured is nothing gained and that success and riches never come easy or on a platter of gold. If this proposal is acceptable by you, do not take undue advantage of the trust I bestowed in you.

I await your urgent reply
Best Regards,
Mrs. Jane Taylor.
Email:{ mrs.janetaylor@accountant.com ]


 
     
Miss Young

If you received a similar letter, please ignore it. Do not answer it. If you do, you will end up on more of the mailing lists used by the criminals behind this fraud. Read more....

 

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