Beggar Deposits 91kg Of Coins In Indian Bank

July 10, 2008 · Filed Under Living, News · Comment 

Laxmi

Laxmi Das from Calcutta is one wise lady. She has been begging in the streets for 44 years and managed to save her self a nice retirement fund. And what a fund, 4 buckets of coins to be precise. The 60 year old beggar decided, after been advised by police, to deposit the money in a bank for safety. She deposited to the bank 91kg of coins which are estimate to worth $692 (30,000 rupees).

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The £1 UK Bungalow

July 9, 2008 · Filed Under Living, News · Comment 

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The southeast coast line of the UK suffers from something called “chronic coastal erosion”, ie the land gets eroded due to the sea and the rains. People that bought houses at the edge of cliffs, are slowly seeing their property go beneath their feet. This has had an effect on property prices too. None thought expected that these houses would one day cost as little as £1 ($1.97). This was discovered by Jane Archer Chris Cutting when they went to the bank to put their house as guarantee for a loan. The bank told them that the three-bedroom bungalow they bought for £20,000 back in 1987 is now worth according to NatWest bank, £1; which is a far cry from the £80,000 price tag they expected.

The coastline has moved towards the house and its only 65 yards away from it. Back in 1987 the distance was 500 yards.

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Have You Seen This Man?

February 7, 2008 · Filed Under Funny, News · 1 Comment 

thai-police-man

Thailand police, after the descriptions of eye witnesses in a bank robbery, published the above sketch of the robber (he was wearing a helmet). If you recognize him the please notify the Thailand police!

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Is it easy to set up an European Bank account from Nigeria?

January 19, 2008 · Filed Under Lead Story, News · Comment 

A day ago we posted in this site an article about a Nigerian scammer that was scammed by a guy called 419 Eater. Being a bit curious I wanted to find out a bit about 419 Eater and I found out from his website that he has managed to gather a lot of stories from people with a great sense of humor that managed quite creatively to scam Nigerian scammers.

I think the dictionary definition for people like 419 Eater is: scam-baiter The person who tries to humiliate and waste the time of Nigerian scammers!

Anyway, I read in particular about this Nigerian 419 scammer who was baited by user Shiver Metimbers into getting a tattoo!

church_logo

To cut the story short, the Nigerian, Mr Nicholas Okorie (doubt if its his real name) send the usual scam email where somebody want to transfer millions of dollars into your account. Shiver Metimbers replayed to him pretending to be Father Bruce Corbin (and also from Father Jack Hackett) the Holy Church of The Tattooed Saint!

Shiver Metimbers managed to persuade Mr. Okorie to get a real tattoo with the “churches” logo in order to get funding from the “church”

okorie5

When Mr. Okorie proved that he got the tattoo, a lot of emails went back and forth between the scammer and the scam-baiter about where and how to send the “church” money to Nigeria.

One of the accounts that Mr. Okorie produced was an account in a major Greek Bank (Piraeus Bank). This can be seen at the email quote below:

Dear father Jack Hackett,

I was not aware of the problems going on with the account number,as it belongs to an organisation in the BUREAU DE CHANGE buisness.Here in nigeria,most money transfers are done through this means as the WESTERN UNION MONEY TRANSFER seems ineffective considering the presence of the E.F.C.C.

I am so sorry about this.please do use this new acc.no.
PIRAEUS BANK
PAPASTRATOU BRANCH 2107
18545 PIREAS ATTICA GREECE
SWIFT CODE:PIRB GRAI 107
FAVOR:INTERCONTRACTS LTD
ACC/NO:GR8901721070 0051 0702 xxxx xxx

I do not know about Mr. Okorie’s other bank accounts (in Honk Kong), mentioned in the emails, and how he managed to open them.

The question that arises is how did Mr. Okorie, who resided in Nigeria (as seen from the email evidence), manage to open an account in a European Union Bank? The strict(?) E.U. regulations require the account holder to be residing at the country where the account is to open, including a residency/work visa.

Was Mr. Okorie acting alone or he managed to open accounts here and there with a help of a bigger scam/mafia network?

It seems from 419 Eater’s website that there have been many cases of scammers. Has the police (Interpol perhaps?) seen all this and tried to arrest any scammer? It will not be impossible to apprehend them as most scammers are tricked to send their pictures (found on 419 Eater’s website)

I think the “Nigerian” or 419 scam is a much more serious issue than what we know!

Best way to tackle Nigerian email scammers

January 17, 2008 · Filed Under Funny, News · 1 Comment 

harry-potter-hand-written-2

I just finished reading the best email exchange ever! Some guy who is in charge of handling the will of the King of Nigeria (or something like that) was searching someone to transfer to the Kings fortune (scam) and user 419 Eater, a person who dedicated his life (with success) to scam the scammers.

The story goes as follows: 419 Eater receives an email in which he is informed that they are looking for someone to transfer $40,000,000 and he has to send all his bank details etc (am sure this may sound familiar to most of you out there as these emails are mass send. 419 Eater does not delete this email but sends in return a thank you email and replies that at the moment he is too busy with a new an lucrative project in which if he wants (the Nigerian guy) can participate. This project pays $100 for every original (book) manuscript page!

So the scammer got the bait and what did he do? He copied by hand the entire Harry Potter book!

Read the whole email exchange here (do browse through the entire manuscript), its worth it :)