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After a Decade, 77-Year-Old Gets Back $110,000 Lost In 'Nigerian Prince' Scam (kansascity.com)

Slashdot reader grep -v '.*' * shares a surprising story. The Kansas City Star profiles the victim of a three-year con that started with an email to a Yahoo inbox back in 2005. A decade ago, Fred Haines was wandering the Wichita airport looking for a Nigerian man hauling two chests full of cash. After an hour of waiting and asking around, he finally came to the realization that the $65 million Nigerian fortune he thought he was inheriting was not coming after all. What is now coming, though, is the $110,000 he had been scammed out of, thanks to the work of the Kansas Attorney General's Office.

From 2005 to 2008, swindlers hoodwinked Haines, a self-employed handyman in Wichita, into spending thousands in pursuit of an imaginary inheritance from a Nigerian government official -- a con known as the Nigerian Prince Scam. Haines re-mortgaged his house three times in the process. Last year, in a settlement with the Department of Justice, Western Union admitted it knew some of its employees had conspired with scam artists to bilk people out of money and had failed to fix the problem. The company set aside $586 million to create a fund to refund victims across the U.S. and Canada... All victims who'd sent money to hucksters using the service were able to request refunds, but only those who had complained to law enforcement or Western Union were notified directly of the settlement.

"It got to the point where they were showing me that the president of Nigeria had sent me a letter. It had his picture on it and everything," Haines said. "I looked it up on the computer to see what the Nigerian president looked like, and it was him." Once, he received an email claiming to be from Robert Mueller, who was then the FBI director. The email was addressed to Haines, code-name "B-DOG," and it was signed with the FBI's address and official seal. "I wish you can remove doubt and suspicious and go ahead I assured you that you will never regret this fund release," the email said in part.

Haines is one of 344 victims who recovered a total of $1,758,988 through the Kansas Attorney General's office -- though when the office sent out 25,000 letters to possible scam victims, many of them were now skeptical of the promise of unclaimed money, and "Some were even angry when employees called to follow up on those who hadn't responded."

8 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. He doesn't deserve it back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He was painfully stupid, gullible, and greedy.

    1. Re:He doesn't deserve it back by marcle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes he was, but even the stupid, gullible, and greedy shouldn't be preyed on by crooks.

    2. Re:He doesn't deserve it back by JustNiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I sort of agree, but it is also a form of education and/or natural selection, and the US is already in dire need of both.

    3. Re:He doesn't deserve it back by Darinbob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My mother falls for the IT scam, but I still can't train her out of it. At least she knows not to give out her bank account number. But a part of her does not want to believe that the nice gentleman who helped her get rid of her viruses was colluding with the guy who asked for her account number, and she flat out told me that she didn't believe me. I told her that there is no company that is going to help her out on her computer for free and that no one knows she when has a virus and will be calling up out of the blue.

      It's really hard to train someone who's elderly to stop trusting people.

    4. Re:He doesn't deserve it back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's really hard to train someone who's elderly to stop trusting people.

      They grew up in a time where trusting people was not normally harmful. Interactions were local. Crooks from the other side of the world did not have easy access to a victim anywhere in the world.

    5. Re:He doesn't deserve it back by rahvin112 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is these people that got stung by these nigerian scams aren't sympathetic. See if this was real they were attempting to assist with money laundering.

      I believe that Western Union needing to be held to account for not blocking these transactions when they clearly knew it was happening is appropriate. But I don't have sympathy for these people, in every way they were trying to participate in a criminal act and they got stung because the other side was a fake criminal.

      Helping someone move money out of a country that they themselves can't move out is money laundering. And if it's real and you assist you can be prosecuted and sent to jail for 5 years. But people are greedy and the see this offer and all they see is dollar signs and they don't care that they are violating the law because they think it's not a big deal.

  2. BS detection by Gavrielkay · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sadly, it is a known fact that the bullshit meter starts to fail in the elderly:
    https://health.howstuffworks.c...

    This is why they are preyed on by utter shitbags who are the real villains in this story.
    The scammers who prey on our most vulnerable and the greedy idiots at WU who helped them should rot in jail in some third world shithole.,

    Say what you want about how it's really their fault and they should have known better. If you're lucky you'll live to be 77+ and you can feel the pain of having earned wisdom only to have it fade away, to have contributed all your life and have it mean nothing. The lack of sympathy in this thread is appalling.

  3. Re:I'd like to see more education programs by msauve · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Critical thinking" in these cases is nothing more than common sense. No, some foreign royalty isn't going to pay Joe Blow a large sum of money for any reason.

    It only affects greedy people who think there's a pot of gold under the rainbow.

    Let Darwinism take its course. Stupidity should be painful.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law