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-   -   guy loses $150k to Nigerian scam (https://www.revscene.net/forums/560660-guy-loses-%24150k-nigerian-scam.html)

johny 01-14-2009 08:01 PM

guy loses $150k to Nigerian scam
 
WOW... what a dumbass!

http://www.windsorstar.com/Leamingto...799/story.html

A Leamington man has fallen prey to international scam artists who strung him along for more than a year with the promise of millions in cash, but ultimately bilked him and his family of $150,000.

John Rempel said he quit his truck driving job, lost friends, borrowed money and crossed the globe in pursuit of a non-existent inheritance, after he was contacted by e-mail in what is known as a Nigerian 419 scam.

Rempel said he borrowed $55,000 from an uncle in Mexico and his parents gave him $60,000 on credit to cover fees for transferring $12.8 million into his name.

“They’re in it now because of me,” said Rempel, 22, breaking into sobs. “If it wasn’t for me, nobody would be in this mess. You think things will work out, but it doesn’t. It’s a very bad feeling. I had lots of friends.

“I never get calls anymore from my friends. You know, a bad reputation.”

His troubles began in July 2007. He said he got an e-mail from someone claiming to be a lawyer with a client named David Rempel who died in a 2005 bomb attack in London, England, and left behind $12.8 million.

“They used to come in the mail,” said Leamington police Const. Kevin O’Neil. “Now the majority of these are sent through e-mail. Keeping up with the times, using all the wonderful technology that’s available to them.”

“I was told once that they send out 30,000 e-mails a day, around the world, and they hope for just one or two responses. Once you return a phone call or return an e-mail, these people now have their hooks into you.”

The lawyer said his client had no family but wanted to leave the money to a Rempel. It was his lucky day.

“It sounded all good so I called him,” said Rempel. “He sounded very happy and said God bless you.”

The man then told him he had to pay $2,500 to transfer the money into his name. Then there were several more documents. Some cost $5,000.

He was told to open an account at a bank in London. That required a $5,000 minimum deposit. The crooks later sent him an e-mail with a link to what he was told were details of his new account. Some money had been transferred there for “safe keeping.”

“Everything was good,” said Rempel.

Then he got an e-mail from a government department — he’s not sure which country — saying he owed $250,000 on tax on his inheritance. Rempel spoke to his contact, who told him they negotiated the fee down to $25,000.

Rempel went to Mexico where his uncle owns a farm. His uncle gave him $10,000 cash and money for a plane ticket. He was going to London to make sure it was legitimate.

“I had $10,000 in cash in my pocket and my uncle sent another $25,000 when I was over there.”

In London, Rempel met some people and handed over the $10,000.

They met Rempel the next day with a suitcase. They said it had $10.6 million in shrink-wrapped U.S. bills. Rempel wanted more proof. His new friends pulled out one bill and “cleansed” it with a liquid “formula,” which washed off some kind of stamp. Rempel was told that process made the money “legal tender.”

“I was like holy crap, is that mine?” he said. “They said ‘yes sir, it’s yours.’ It all sounded legit.”

Rempel returned to his hotel room clutching the formula and waited for the others so they could cleanse all his money. They never showed, and later told him they got held up. In the meantime, Rempel dropped the formula. The bottle broke. He called his contact who said he’d get more. Rempel returned to Leamington and waited.

A few weeks later Rempel got a call. They found more formula. It would cost $120,000.

“I thought, ‘let’s work on it, nothing is impossible,’” said Rempel.

His contacts were willing to meet associates in different countries to get cash for the formula. It would require several plane tickets, worth $6,000 each.

Rempel was told they collected $100,000, but still needed $20,000. There was a guy in Nigeria who had it, but another plane ticket was required. The contact later told him he could only get $15,000 and “begged” Rempel for the last $5,000.

Rempel borrowed money. He stopped making Visa and car payments.

They called a week later and said the money was ready to go. They just needed $6,900 for travel costs and to rent trunks to ship the money.

Later, the men called to say they were at the airport in New York. Security stopped them and they needed $12,500 for a bribe. Finally, Rempel had enough.

“I said, ‘no way I’m cleaned out.’”

Rempel, his parents and 10-year-old brother Ike drove to New York. They spent a day searching the airport for the men, with no luck. They returned home and called police.

“I really thought in my heart this was true,” said Rempel.

— with files from Dalson Chen
© Copyright (c) The Windsor Star

Eatman 01-14-2009 08:17 PM

wow, what a dumbass!

chouchou 01-14-2009 08:23 PM

...12.8 million dollars.....
too good to be true rofl

wyattH 01-14-2009 08:23 PM

i'd say his dumb.. but really.. thats just sad
i see problem written all over it (mainly, the "fees" can be taken out of the 12.8$M... and only 25,000 in tax?)
anyway.. too bad for him.. i hope they catch fucking crooks like this.

SkinnyPupp 01-14-2009 08:27 PM

Greed and stupidity makes people almost too easy to fool

Armind 01-14-2009 08:29 PM

I thought a 22 year old would be smarter. Stupid fuck.

Culture_Vulture 01-14-2009 08:30 PM

22 years old,
and ruined.

tsk..

KingDeeCee 01-14-2009 08:32 PM

....This shit is still happening? Oh my lord.

teaoh 01-14-2009 08:39 PM

His family didnt know what he needed the money for?

B-nAnA 01-14-2009 08:43 PM

wow...good job for lending the money without knowing why...he must not know what spam is haha

blackjack101 01-14-2009 08:46 PM

fail

BlackV62K2 01-14-2009 08:52 PM

It still shocks me that people fall for this kind of crap.

jigga250 01-14-2009 08:56 PM

Quote:

“He sounded very happy and said God bless you.”
I bet he did:p


lol @ the $120,000 bottle of "bill-cleansing formula" that only a guy in Nigeria has

Honyoung 01-14-2009 09:26 PM

rook
wonder what they guys scamming him thought of when they got this guy

macatacz 01-14-2009 09:37 PM

wow... it's amazing how stupid some people are...

bartone 01-14-2009 09:41 PM

i think i got this email before about this guy dying and leaving a fortune

tonyvu 01-14-2009 09:51 PM

holly crap, what a dumbass lol. dunno what was going through his head when he got an e-mail saying he's inherited 12.8 mill lmao

InvisibleSoul 01-14-2009 10:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by johny (Post 6224619)
They met Rempel the next day with a suitcase. They said it had $10.6 million in shrink-wrapped U.S. bills. Rempel wanted more proof. His new friends pulled out one bill and “cleansed” it with a liquid “formula,” which washed off some kind of stamp. Rempel was told that process made the money “legal tender.”

http://kevinchiu.org/emote/facepalm.jpg

mushroom-head 01-14-2009 10:27 PM

only an idiot would believe in those Nigerian emails

m4k4v4li 01-14-2009 10:35 PM

http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=1Br6dK5yZQk

The7even 01-14-2009 10:42 PM

good, hes a fucking idiots and deserves it.

bsoni 01-14-2009 10:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tallow (Post 6224882)
wow... it's amazing how stupid some people are...

+1:eek:

laureate 01-14-2009 10:56 PM

i remember a story where some woman fell for the scam, and withdrew her retirement savings and mortgaged her home to pay the nigerians ($400 000).

EDIT: found the link http://www.katu.com/news/34292654.html

threezero 01-14-2009 10:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 6chr0nic4 (Post 6225028)

:haha::haha::haha:

Armind 01-14-2009 11:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 6chr0nic4 (Post 6225028)

That was fuckin' awesome hahaha


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