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: iKobo Inc. <info@ikobo.com>
Subject: DELIVERY
To:
Date: Sunday, July 5, 2009, 7:40 AM




Our Ref: IKB/NGN/M2F01
Your Ref:

iKobo is a company that specializes in money transfers. With them, you
send money to the any countries with your MasterCard or Visa. The
recipient gets the transfer put onto a secured Visa debit card which can
be used worldwide at ATM locations for cash withdrawals. This debit card,
which is reusable, is shipped to the recipient first.
As part of our expansion and promotional package for the fiscal year 2009,
we are pleased to inform you that your parcel containing the sum of $2.8
Million US dollars which has been made available to you through an iKobo
Visa card.
We have concluded plans to deliver this card to your as soon as possible.
You are to send us the following details:

FULL NAME:
DELIVERY ADDRESS:
PHONE NUMBER
COUNTRY:
OCCUPATION:
MARITAL STATUS:
SEX:
AGE:

You are also to immediately pay the delivery charges of US$120 immediately
so as to ensure prompt delivery.
We look forward to hearing from you soon.
Copyright © 2001-2009 iKobo, Inc.
https://www.ikobo.com



 
     

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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