Monday, December 12, 2011

Is this some sort of scam?

Kelly Ko Fabrics


2 Wilmington Court


Tankerville Road


London


SW16 5LN


Tel: +44 703 193 0785





Hello





My name is Kelly Brown , C.E.O to Kelly Ko Fabrics. Kelley Ko is a textile agency established 1990 by Brown and Jeanne Kelley specializing in fashion fabrics for clothing manufactures and many designer ranges. Our office is located in SW London , We are In search of a Representative in Your region to Work for us as a Part Time worker and this will not affect your current state of work.





The main scope of work for this Representative will be to accept payment via Check or Wire Transfer and then deduct His/Her 10% working allowance and a extra 5% for effectiveness and send down the rest to our Head Office In the United Kingdom. If you are Interested, kindly get back to me with your full name, phone number and residential address to (kellybrown.fabrics@live.com)





Thanks





Please note that it wouldn't cost you anything to receive payment on our company's behalf.Please reply only if you will like to work from home part-time and get paid weekly without leaving or it affecting your present job (PAY IS GOOD)





NB: Kelley Ko Fabrics. will never ask you for anything like bank account number,routing number,credit card,passwords,s.s.n # etc. If anyone asks for those on our behalf please do not give out this info. This is to ensure your security and non involvement in cases of Identity Theft. Please Kindly Fill the Form and Send it back|||Yep.





Fake lottery scams and other variants of "419" fraud follow a fixed script that works in stages. In most cases the victim is not asked for money immediately, so as not to alert the spam recipients, who might report the email addresses to the webmail providers and get them shut down. Here is a typical sequence:





1. Victim is notified via spam that he/she won a lottery prize and is told to contact a "claims agent".


2. Victim contacts "claims agent", who replies and tells victim to fill in a form with personal data.


3. Victim complies and is told that the winning is confirmed and he/she can receive the money, but only after paying various handling charges to the agent.


4. Victim sends money by Western Union, criminal takes money and ignores complaints after prize is not paid out.





In some cases there is a third party, such as a fake bank or courier service, adding another stage. It can get pretty elaborate, with fees increasing after each payment, if there are multiple payments. All parties (other than the victim of course) are either the same person or members of the same gang.|||Absolutely. In fact, a rule of thumb: If it looks like a scam, feels like a scam and smells like a scam, it is a scam.|||yes


everything you recieve will be a scam


EVERYTHING|||DELETE. DELETE. DELETE. READ NO MORE....... WHY ARE YOU STILL READING THIS? GO AND DELETE THAT SCAM OF A MESSAGE......... COME ON............ LETS GET IT GOIN... DELETEIN TIME!|||Yes, it's a scam....delete it.

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