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With fanciful stories and wild promises, fraudsters will do anything to get your money. Don't fall for these advanced-fee/419 scams.
With fanciful stories and wild promises, fraudsters will do anything to get your money. Don't fall for these advanced-fee/419 scams.
Pay now and lose
An advance-fee scam involves any scam in which con artists persuade you to give them funds in advance in the hope that you will receive something of a higher value in return. These scams can be unbelievably imaginative and involve anything the con artist is able to enact.
Some commons advanced-fee scams
Tips on avoiding advanced-fee/419 scams
If you realise you're fallen victim to a scam, contact your bank immediately and report the incident to the police.
If a beneficiary that you make payments to suddenly faxes or emails you its new banking details, confirm the change before making a payment. It could be a scam.
Deposit and refund scams are designed to trick you with payment slips or proof of payments in the hope that you'll hand over goods or provide services before you notice that the funds have not actually been cleared.
Phishing, smishing and vishing are all attempts to defraud you through email, mobile, and telephoning scams respectively. Letting you guard down just once can lead to a cascade of a serious losses.
If a beneficiary that you make payments to suddenly faxes or emails you its new banking details, confirm the change before making a payment. It could be a scam.
Deposit and refund scams are designed to trick you with payment slips or proof of payments in the hope that you'll hand over goods or provide services before you notice that the funds have not actually been cleared.
Phishing, smishing and vishing are all attempts to defraud you through email, mobile, and telephoning scams respectively. Letting you guard down just once can lead to a cascade of a serious losses.