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: Mr. Mnguni Modiba <mngunimodiba@sohu.com>
Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2007 10:41 AM
Subject: From Mr. Mnguni Modiba.

From Mr. Mnguni Modiba.
Email:mrmodiba@o2.pl

                       
Dear friend,
       
 
This message might meet you in utmost surprise. However, it's just my urgent need for foreign partner that made me to contact you for this transaction. I am a banker by profession from Republic of Benin in West Africa and currently holding the post of foreign remittance  director in our bank.
 
I have the opportunity of transferring the left over funds ($22,100,000.00) of one of my bank clients who died along with his entire family in Kenya plane crash 2003. You can confirm the geniuses of the deceased death.
 
You can  view this  site  to know  more.
http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/africa/07/20/kenya .crash/index.html
 
Hence, I am inviting you for a business deal where this money can be shared between us in the ratio of 60/30 / 10% will be preserved for helping the helpless people, like charity organization and motherless babies homes.
 
If you agree to my business proposal, further details of the transfer will be forwarded to you As soon as I receive your return mail. Have a great day.
 
Yours Sincerely,
Mr. Mnguni Modiba.

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....

 

Copyright © 2004-2015 419.bittenus.com. All rights reserved. Updated 04-Feb-2018