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Who helps the others

What abouy the person who thought they were being help by a legitmate bank .
Who was only tring to get back on track and get their live back in order
Where do they get help who can they contact in Nigeria

posted by : Joyce, 24 June 2009 Complain about this comment
Scammers

I have a great idea. Why not just be-head every person that is involved in crime? I just love what they do in Iraq. They should do it in the US. China should also we whipped off the map.

posted by : ruler of the world., 12 March 2009 Complain about this comment
Aussie Scam Victim

I support the advise made by the nigerian diplomat in Aussie. All scam victims are thieves and they should be punished and given atleast 5 yrs in jail term for their greediness.

I disagree with the stupid comment made by Vasek on the 22 August 2008 . This is absolutely a rubbish comment and he should thrown out of this site.

posted by : james, 11 September 2008 Complain about this comment
Scam'n Spam!

Your article is dead on but without forgetting the legitimate complaints. Another thing there are cases where some unscrupulous Nigerians [not exclusive] go to other countries for "Business"

I could see in the near future officials of some countries requiring a business itinerary from alien "businessmen/women" for each entry AND each exit.

It's the banks that want to see money rolling quickly nothing to slow it down, they do not care who holds the account.

Borders has become a finish line to international criminals.

Hey here is a solution, tie in a license system to passports for funds wired internationally. The one dishing out the money would require by law the traveling business persons passport or number or info representing the passport with a government or bank official present during the transaction.

"Bussinessmen/women" present or not if the passport number is fake the bank or government official's computers would ring as such, then money saved! If it's legitimate it would be compared to a complaint list.

Then we will see if Nigeria [not exclusive] is that innocent or guilty by measuring the number of passports issued from those countries.

posted by : Phil, 25 August 2008 Complain about this comment
That's an awful lot...

...of Nigerians. Although LESS than 140.000 individuals could also be one or two, couldn't it. Regarding the laundering of money, are the officials so upset, because they're being robbed of something that was formerly their territory, I wonder..?

posted by : Holgster, 25 August 2008 Complain about this comment
nigerian scams

I totally agree with this mans comments, any person that gets involved with these scammers is asking for trouble. an honest person would not enter into any of it. only the dishonest and the greedy.

posted by : alfred arnold, 25 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Money Laundry

More specifically, the victims were trying to take part in a money laundry which is a scam though.

posted by : Ali, 25 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Only 0.01%?

"He added that there were 140 million people in Nigeria and fewer than 0.1 per cent were involved, which, to be honest sounds to us like a fairly big industry and finding someone taking part in a scam would not be that difficult."

Wouldn't that mean 140,000 scammers?

posted by : lol, 24 August 2008 Complain about this comment
On the contrary...

My four email addresses are crammed with this Nigerian crap they export so freely and I never send them a goddamned penny. But still this .1% of the Nigerian population takes up almost 95% of my email space and I have to wade through this tide of Nigerian excrement to find legitimate email. I have no pity for Nigerian businessmen, diplomats (there's a joke) or politicians who can't find or put a stop to all the trash us honest, non-greedy and not-particularly-gullible users of the Internet have to spend honest time and dollars on. Maybe it would be simpler to just pull that whole country off the world wide web. We certainly won't miss their stink, Mr.Olu Agbi!

posted by : Stormm, 24 August 2008 Complain about this comment
victims of greed

I've always thought that whoever got scammed deserved to be scammed. It's simple darwinism: if you're dumb enough to let your own greed turn you into a dumb victim, then you deserve to be ripped off!

posted by : Scyphe, 24 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Not all vicitms are greedy, some are innocent.

Like my title said. Some Nigerian scam people on dating sites. pretend to be someone in love with a victim to get them to send them money by using various lies and excuses to meet up.

Some Nigerian scammers try to scam merchants and sellers on sites like criagslist or ebay.

Are those victims BAD people?! Hell no. they are lonely people or people selling merchandise. 

Many victims are scammed because they have a good heart. like some that think they are giving to a church overseas. 

So that Ambassador should STFU. their government should show more effort in getting those scammers instead of sticking more knives in the victims.


posted by : Geniv, 24 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Looking for love ..

Dont forget the poor unfortunates that are looking for love that get scammed by these lowlifes. Does he think they should be locked up also?

posted by : Jon Lamb, 23 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Not a bad idea

Not a bad idea. At the very least they should relabel the "victims" as "suckers" who deserved to lose their money.

posted by : BB, 23 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Diplomatic Flimflammery!

Diplomatic Flimflammery! 

What the diplomat neglected to mention is that the "greedy victim" format is only one of a dozen or so popular varieties of Nigerian scam... many of which play on the decency and compassion the victim. 

eg. Romance Scam - the Nigerian lad pretends to be a Russian blonde desperately seeking romance. Needs money to travel to meet "her" true love. Wicked uncle demands fees...

Puppy Scam - Nigerian pretends to breed English Bulldogs, offers them free to good home - with a few associated fees.

Charity Scam - Nigerian pretends to be impoverished Pastor, desperately trying to save the children in the war-torn nation of his choice... the best way to do this? Fees, apparently. 

Loan Scam - Nigerian uses fake loan company website to offer low interest loans to cash-strapped families. 

Buying/Selling Scam - Nigerian poses as owner or buyer of car/bike/computer etc. Sends you a fake check in payment or tries to pay with stolen credit card info. The really clever ones actually make off with your car/bike/computer as well.

Incidently, Nigerian scammers often pay corrupt officials - including diplomats - for fake I.D. Though I'm sure that Olu Agbi wouldn't be involved in anything like that. Would he? 

posted by : Dex, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Funny.

Is that the same diplomat that asked me if I wanted to hold on to a few million dollars for him? 

The same diplomat that uses a yahoo address?

No way.

posted by : Mat, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
interesting counter point

Interesting counter point - in today's nannying societies, people sometimes forget there are consequences associated with their actions.

"After all, the whole concept of the Nigerian scam is that a mark will make a lot of cash by robbing the Nigerian government and laundering money."

It definitely is money laundering, but I wonder what percentage of the average person knows what money laundering is when they see it? So few people understand how their home loans are funded, let alone international buggery like this.

I highly doubt Professor Olu Agbi would be as objective if it were Australian citizens who were bilking Nigerian residents out of their money, irregardless of the questionable morality of the scam.

posted by : James, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Professor Alu Ogbi should be worried

Years before nigerian scams became "Nigerian e-mails", they were "Nigerian letters". Yes, it's an ancient art.

But diplomats should watch their mouths a bit, because I remmeber a case sometime in early 1990's in Czech Republic, when a pensioner who lost his life savings trough one of those letters and was laughed at at Nigerian Embassy. He came next day with his gun and shot one of the bast.. I mean diplomats of course, dead as he was leaving the building.

Careful dear professor the Aussies may be no wimpier.

posted by : Vasek, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Olu Agbi deserves no sympathy

Not all 419 scams encourage the mark to commit a crime. Maybe someone from the 419eater club should target Olu Agbi.

posted by : Steve, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
0.1 per cent

isn't that by any chance also the exact internet penetration in Nigeria?

posted by : Raven737, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
140K!

140,000 people are involved in the scam? that's a lot of people! Thankfully only the greedy and stupid get involved in this so there's no real victims!

posted by : Elton, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment
Irony, I've heard of it.

A big fat LOL at those who get scammed. And even bigger LOL if they get in trouble for attempted fraud.

posted by : Pete, 22 August 2008 Complain about this comment

Nigerian scam victims should be locked up

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