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Man Arrested in Australia Over Nigerian E-mail Scam

slasher_14 writes "A 39 year old Sydney man has been arrested over the Nigerian Scam. Simultanious raids were conducted in two homes by police, who siezed computers and documents. Over the last 6 months, Australian police have tracked about 1.5 million dollars. The man faces Dubbo Local court today, charged with 17 offenses." Hopefully this means my inbox will be seeing less of these e-mails.

32 of 346 comments (clear)

  1. Thank God we're seeing more of this by CrackHappy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's so nice to see that governments and police forces are finally able to catch up to these kinds of spammers and criminals to get them out of my damned inbox. I almost wonder if it wouldn't be cool for a Internet task force to be developed, completely divorced from any government that would try to track these kinds of people down and turn them in to local authorities. Any volunteers?

    --
    1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d Capitalization really works: i helped my uncle jack off a horse
    1. Re:Thank God we're seeing more of this by rf0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      These 419 scams (named after the nigerian police code) can be dangerous. There have been reports of where people have actually gone to foreign countries and then been kidnapped forcing the familes to pay a ransom note.

      Rus

    2. Re:Thank God we're seeing more of this by GMontag · · Score: 3, Funny

      It is that easy to get a hot chick with money? Forget about those rich russina woman, I am going American!

    3. Re:Thank God we're seeing more of this by hendridm · · Score: 5, Funny

      > These 419 scams (named after the nigerian police code) can be dangerous. There have been reports of where people have actually gone to foreign countries and then been kidnapped forcing the familes to pay a ransom note.

      Sounds like natural selection to me. I'm surprised they figured out how to book the plane ticket.

    4. Re:Thank God we're seeing more of this by rifter · · Score: 4, Informative

      " > These 419 scams (named after the nigerian police code) can be dangerous. There have been reports of where people have actually gone to foreign countries and then been kidnapped forcing the familes to pay a ransom note."

      Sounds like natural selection to me. I'm surprised they figured out how to book the plane ticket.

      Discovery channel had a special on these, and said they actually predated fax machines. Originally the scams were sent by first class mail (so, no, putting a stamp on spam will not stop it, at least in this case), then by international fax (again expensive) when fax machines were invented, then by email when that became available.

      Then they explained that people were actually paying these spammers and going to foreign countries to meet them at the bank, etc. As if that was not bad enough, they interviewed a successful businessman and multimillionaire who gave them every last dime of his cash over a period of years! I guess that proves you don't have to be smart or even hard working to become a rich businessman in the US (though I haven't made it yet, and would not give the Nigerian spammers a dime). :P

    5. Re:Thank God we're seeing more of this by t0ny · · Score: 4, Funny
      Hopefully this means my inbox will be seeing less of these e-mails.

      Dont worry, you can still naturally enlarge your breasts.

      BTW, does selling natural breast enlargement to male computer users seem redundant to anybody else?

      --

      Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.

  2. Bit player by Carnildo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    17 offenses? $1.5 million? Sounds like he's a small-time wannabe. Don't expect any noticable reduction in the number of scams in your mailbox.

    --
    "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    1. Re:Bit player by frankthechicken · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not just the money, it's the fact there were that many people willing to give up information so easily that makes it so scary. It just shows why security is so bloody hard to maintain. You cannot ever have a truly secure system whilst relying on people who don't know the power/value of their OWN personal information, let alone someone else's.

  3. Wait a minute ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 5, Funny

    They can't seize that money, part of that 1.5 million is supposed to be mine. Dammit I got the emails to prove it too!

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
  4. A kindly request for help by omar.sahal · · Score: 5, Funny

    TO: Slashdot.org community

    Dear Sirs Madams
    "I am Mrs. Mariam Abacha, the widow of Gen. Sani Abacha, The Late Nigerian Military Head of State. I am presently in distress and under House arrest while my son Mohammed is undergoing trial in Sydney by bribed officials in Australia. He is presently detained in prison custody. The government has frozen all the family account and auctioned all our properties.
    To save the family from total bankruptcy and to save my son I have managed to ship to Europe and Asia through a Shipping company, the sum of US20, 000,000.00 respectively kept by my late husband."
    You assistance is requested as a non-Nigerian citizen to assist in countering this crime. I will pay large sums in order to pay these bribed officials of Australia, in order to free my son. You will be paid most handsomely to aid in the transfer of these monies. If the funds can be transferred to your name, in your United States account, then you can forward the funds as directed by my associates. In exchange for your accommodating services I would agree to allow you to retain 10%, or US$4 million of this amount.
    However, to be a legitimate transferee of these moneys according to Nigerian law, you must presently be a depositor of at least US$100,000 in a Nigerian bank which is regulated by the Central Bank of Nigeria.
    If it will be possible for you to assist us, we would be most grateful. We suggest that you meet with us in person in Lagos, and that during your visit I introduce you to the representatives of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, as well as with certain officials of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
    Please call me at your earliest convenience at [Phone Number]. Time is of the essence in this matter; very quickly the Nigerian Government will realize that the Central Bank is maintaining this amount on deposit, and attempt to levy certain depository taxes on it.

  5. Other news: by QEDog · · Score: 4, Funny

    Man arrested for penis enlargement scam. 17 millions of penis inches were found during the raid...

    --
    "There is no teacher but the enemy."-Mazer Rackham
    1. Re:Other news: by LrdHlmt · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... I almost peeed my pants

      Dear Sirs Madams

      I kindly request your help to transfer 9 1/2 inches of penis, left my my late husband, left in Nigeria's National Morgue.

      As a sign of good will I'll request you to send me a couple of inches of your own equipment ASAP.

      I would be very grateful to transfer 25% of my penis supply to a surgeon of your preference.

  6. Re:guess that proves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    that it really wasnt some jerk in Nigeria behind the scam.

    Yep, it sure does. I can't wait until the catch the one guy sending the penis enlargement and the other guy sending the viagra spams. With the three of them behind bars, spam will pretty much cease to exist forever.

  7. Re:Good news, but... by Gleng · · Score: 5, Funny

    Check out The Ebola Monkey Man. Not only is it extremely funny, but it shows just how widespread the problem is, and just how far these fucks will go to try and steal your money.

    --
    "Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
  8. This is going to make all the difference by heironymouscoward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Like... the centre of 419 spamming is Amsterdam and London AFAIK, and it's such a large business that arresting one guy is pretty much meaningless.

    PCs should simply come with warning stickers: "ATTENTION: if anyone offers you money, advice on making money, or easy ways to make money, HE IS A CROOK. (if you don't believe us, please send $1000 to us in small bills IMMEDIATELY to learn it the hard way.)"

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature
  9. The US Secret Services pages on this scam: by ron_ivi · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.secretservice.gov/alert419.shtml "The Financial Crimes Division of the Secret Service receives approximately 100 telephone calls from victims/potential victims and 300-500 pieces of related correspondence per day."

  10. Alright! by EverDense · · Score: 3, Funny

    Send me AUD$50 and I'll hit him for you...

    honest!

    --
    http://jesus.everdense.com/
  11. Effect on the local economy? by vk2tds · · Score: 4, Funny

    Has anyone concidered how bad this might be for the local economy. After all, the $1.5M in the bank account was probably the only reason that the bank was even open...

    I am just concerned how the local economy is going to handle so much less money coming in. This was probably 80% of the business at the bank :-)

    Darryl

    1. Re:Effect on the local economy? by hayden · · Score: 3
      This was probably 80% of the business at the bank
      Bank, regional Australia?

      I think the phrase you are looking for is "What bank?"

      --
      Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
  12. I am with the Police Unit who conducted this raid. by orichter · · Score: 4, Funny

    We currently have this 1.5 Million dollars and are trying to return it to its rightful owners. If you have been subjected to this evil Nigerian money scam, please send your Name, Social Security Number, Date of Birth, and the amount stolen from you along with a bank account number where we can return your funds. Our e-mail address is u.r.sucker@hotmail.com. Please help us to right this terrible wrong:)

  13. Not the *only* person.... by MrClever · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here in the land of Oz, last night's broadcast news (and repeated this morning and again a few minutes ago on the mid-day news), this Australian arrest was part of multi-national raid involving basically every continent except Antarctica!!

    IIRC some of the noteable arrests occured in Cairo, Amsterdam, Australia, Malaysia and Singapore. This was (is??) a global scam, but evidence is stacking up to suggest this Australian connection was one of the key players (not merely a pawn).

  14. Name? by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 3, Funny
    I didn't RTFA, but was his name by any chance Prince Wandube Muntumbo? I'm still waiting for a check from him.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  15. Oh, the typos... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 3, Funny

    Do these people who mimic the 419 scams also mimic the atrocious spelling, typos and poor command of the english language in most of the Nigerian scam emails I get? I just wonder how an Australian dude could pull off a _true_ Nigerian scam unless he gets all those little details just right.

  16. If you can ask this question then you have by TCaM · · Score: 5, Funny

    obviously never had the pleasure of working a hekp desk job. Ownership of a computer has nothing to do with intelligence or common sense.

  17. Justice by BCW2 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bailif whack his pee pee.

    (with apologies to Cheech & Chong)

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  18. using WHOIS by dnahelix · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I got this email this morning...

    Hello,Previously you had requested some information online in regards to potentially earning additional income from home.Our company Travelogia(one of the fastest growing companies in North America) has ...[bulk edited out - you get the idea] ... earning additional income, I will not waste your time. Remember, it won't cost you a dime to check us out...sure might cost you an absolute fortune not to! http://www.ProTravelBiz.com Sincerely Robert Holman

    it was from "abeulicnta@ebay.com" <ihmribcyph@sina.com> which is messed up because it's like a fake email within a fake email. Of course, it was formatted the same way you see here, no correct breaks or anything. Anyway, I go look up the website name on register.com's WHOIS feature. (Note: I had to hit refresh several times before I got more than a 'timeout') Well, this is what I got! (in the form of a gif image, go figure)

    Organization:
    Robert L. Holman II
    Robert Holman II
    4617 E Holiday Estate Court
    Granbury, TX 76049
    US
    Phone: (817) 326-6107
    Fax..: (817) 326-5066
    Email: Robert@Robert-Holman.com

    Registrar Name....: enom.com
    Registrar Whois...: whois.enom.com
    Registrar Homepage: http://www.enom.com

    Domain Name: PROTRAVELBIZ.COM

    Created on............: Mon, Oct 27, 2003 [Note the very recent creation date]
    Expires on............: Wed, Oct 27, 2004
    Record last updated on: Mon, Oct 27, 2003

    etc, etc...


    So I called him, apparently at his house, judging by the unceremonious, 'yeah this is Robert' answer. I confirmed it was Robert Holman and then proceeded to tell him I did not appreaciate his SPAM and he needed to at least put an opt out and use his real email address on the return. He stammered as he tried to tell me he could prove I 'opted-in' which is total bullshit. I told him if I got any more mail from him I was going to sue him.

    So, my fellow SPAM-hating brethren and sistren, use WHOIS on register.com to fight back at these jerks.

    I also used WHOIS to find out who was sending me bogus eBay login screens.

    --
    Slashdot Eds Link Anonymous Posts With Logged Posts
    They Are Vermin Feeding On Each Other's Feces.
    I Hate \.
  19. Fake! by quacking+duck · · Score: 3, Funny

    I call fake. It wasn't written in ALL CAPS.

  20. Re:Typical by larry+bagina · · Score: 3, Funny
    An american tourist was driving through the Autralian outback, when he sees a naked man chasing after a kangaroo.

    A while later, he stops to gas up his land rover, and sees a one-legged man jacking off with furious abandon.

    The American says to gas station attendant, "What sort of fucked up country is this? I see naked men running after kangaroos, and this pervert is masturbating in public!"

    The gas attendant looks at him and replies, "Well, mate, you can't expect ol' Tommy to catch a kangaroo if he's only got one leg"

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  21. All jokes aside by t0qer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My friend's grandmother has this neighbor who was sort of the neighborhood whacko (schizophenia, medicated) He lived with his dad up until the time his father died and the estate was split up amungst the surviving siblings.

    Well, he had a trusting nature about him, almost anyone could be his friend. Since he had been a roadie for many bands (Grateful Dead, Fleetwood Mac to name a few) for the price of getting him stoned you could listen to him go on for hours about his days as a roadie, while you fished out of his carp stocked green algae swimming pool. Although he was crazy, he was a fun guy to be around if you had a few hours to kill.

    So here he was with all this money from his families estate. The house was sold, so he bought himself a luxery van to live out of. The rest of the money he put into money market accounts and had planned to live out the rest of his days cruising to concerts and playing his guitar out of the back of his van.

    Tradgedy struck when the nigerian e-mail scam hit his inbox. He fell for it hook line and sinker. After arranging with the english accennted guy on the other end of the phone line, they agreed to meet in amsterdam to facilitate the transfer of funds (which was through cashiers check)

    Even after he got off the phone, even when he was going to the bank, even when he stepped off the plane his sanity nagged, no pleaded with him "This is a scam Kim, please just go home". Sanity had never gotten him anywhere so he just ignored it.

    He met the guy at some cannibus club, and after a few nice bowls of fine green, his sanity returned to his subconciousness, where it layed dormant most of the time. He handed the man the cashier check for $200,000 with full confidence he was doing the smart thing with his money.

    Once returning to the states he tried dialing the number the man had given him, disconnected. He tried the e-mail address, no reply. 3 months after he had pissed away $200,000 on a cashier check and a handshake, he finally told his friends what had happened.

    I posted this somewhere before on the nigerian scam, a lot of people responded "Serves him right for being stupid with his money" I don't agree with them though. We're talking about a guy with the emotional maturity of a 9 year old.

    The same mentality that would perform this scam on weak minded and lonely adults is the same mentality that would take advantage of a little kid. Spare me the "Theives code of honor" I hope this guy gets life.

  22. that's globalization for you by unboring · · Score: 3, Funny

    A man in Australia, claiming to be a Nigerian, dupes people in the US!

  23. Trick or Treat? by Licensed2Hack · · Score: 3, Funny

    Robert Holman II
    4617 E Holiday Estate Court
    Granbury, TX 76049
    US
    Phone: (817) 326-6107
    Fax..: (817) 326-5066


    Gee, Granbury is just a few miles southwest of Ft. Worth, TX. Think there might be a few trick or treaters showing up at this slimeball's door tomorrow night?

    And no one would even think of going to a local bookstore and grab a subscription postcard from all the magazines on the rack, fill in this slimeball's name and mail them in. Would they?

    WOULD THEY??

  24. similar scams by golgotha007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    this 'nigerian spam' idea has appeared in other forms as well.

    i'm trying to sell my car and posted it on a few free car sales websites. so far, i've received 4 of emails exactly like this:

    "We have a client who is interested in purchasing
    your ( 2000 vw gti vr6 glx ) for the price of $( 14,500 ).Please forward me your final asking price "


    of course, i then reply with the price confirmation, but then i get this:

    "Hello,
    Thanks a lot for your mail and the information, also for all your efforts towards making this transaction a success, i really love it and wish to buy as soon as possible. Anyway, this is how we are going to seal this transaction there is an associate of mine in the US who is owing me $19,800 i am going to instruct him to send you a cashier's check for that amount,and when it clears your bank you can now send my balance by Westernunion. Although i know that the value of the check is more than the price of the 2000 VW GTI VR6 GLX, but i am willing to trust you with my balance So if this offer is acceptable to you,let me have your contact information so that i can instruct my associate to send you a check,that is your name,address and phone number Please get back to me as soon as soon as you get this mail so that i can know your decision regards this transaction. I am banking on my balance so that i will be able to settle my shippers here in there local office because it is cheaper and faster.My regards to the family
    Banks"


    so this scam basically falls upon the same principle. obviously we all know where this is going, but i decide to play along anyway and sent him a bogus PO box to send the check to.

    the next email was this:
    "Thanks so much for the mail and the rightful information. Anyway, i just want you to know that what is required is your physical address and phone number, so as to deliver the payment to you in person. So, do well to let me have your Full name, physical address and phone number, in order to get the payment to you as soon as possible. And what do you mean by "terrifc deal"?. Waiting to hear back from you soon. Thank you and God bless.
    Regards
    Banks"


    my question: why does he need my physical address and phone number? it's obvious at this point he will let me know about some snag and that i need to send him some money for whatever reason.

    on a side note, i am selling my Volkswagen GTI VR6 GLX if anyone is interested.

    so, people selling their autos online, be wary of this scam.