Nigerian Letter Scams and Pets. Online Fraud Increases in 2007, and How They Did It.

According to a report released on Thursday by the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), monetary damages caused by online fraud were up 20 percent in 2007. The total amount of damages reported added up to over $239 million, with a median* loss of an astonishing $680 per complaint. This is an increase of the $199 million caused in 2006.

The IC3, a law enforcement agency which works closely with the FBI, receives and processes complaints dealing with auction fraud, non-delivery, credit card fraud, spam, intrusion, identity theft and child pornography. The report includes some interesting findings:

Perpetrators are predominantly male (75.8%) with half of them coming from California, Florida, New York, Texas, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Georgia.  The majority of perpetrators come from the United States, with a significant number coming from Europe and Nigeria.

Perpetrators do not seem to be sexist with thier targets, although maybe they should be.  Only 57 percent of the complainants were male. However, Male complainants lost considerably more money than females, with a ratio of $1.67 to every $1.00 lost by females. This could be accredited to online spending habits or the types of schemes used against victims. Age also seems to have little or no relevance to victims. Although the stereotypical online fraud victim is a grandma helpless in the ways of the internet, the study shows that you are just as likely to become a victim whether you are 23 or 85.

*Although the median loss for victims was $680 dollars, the mean loss was $2,529. This is because nearly half of complaints received dealt with monetary loss less than $1,000 but 12 percent reported loss of over $5,000.  Certain incidents reported losses even larger. The biggest losers in 2007 were victims of investment fraud, with a median loss of $3,547.

Yes, Nigerian letter scams did really well in 2007 – 6.4 percent of total reported loss came from those tricky African scammers, with an average $1,922 dollars lost per incident.  Can’t believe people fall for it? Apparently so, and when they fall, they fall hard.

As one might expect, online fraud increases dramatically during the holiday season. In 2005, the number of complaints received between the months of October and December increased to 30,000 compared to the rather steady 17,000 of previous months.

The report also includes some interesting descriptions of the more popular scams used throughout the year. A large amount of them, interestingly enough, dealt with the online pet trade.

When the fraudsters target pet sellers, the fraudster agrees to buy the pet and sends a bad check for more than the amount asked by the seller. They explain that the extra payment is for someone who will be taking care of the pet temporarily, and to wire the amount of extra money to a bank account. If the scam is successful, the seller wires the money before the check is cleared, and the fraudster makes off with the cash before the check is found out to be fake. Tricky buggers.

Romance scam was rampant in 2007. Online dating sites proved to be fruitful hunting grounds for scammers.  First, the fraudster browses the site looking for potential targets. Once contact is made, he attempts to gain trust through… romantic gestures. Included in these gestures is a  burning desire to meet the person, but they explain that they do not have enough money to make the trip. The scam is successful when the victim agrees to send money to pay for the transport. Then, of course, some unforeseen event occurs that prevents the fraudster with following through with the visit, the dating site account is deleted and they are never heard from again.  Not only is the victim out of the money for transport, but they are in danger of shorting out computer keyboards with excessive amounts of tears.

Obviously, scammers love to play on other’s hearts and emotions. Another prominent scam is the Adoption Fraud, or Charity Fraud, in which large amounts of email are sent to email addresses (spam) with subjects such as “URGENT HELP NEEDED” They then of course, ask for donations for causes such as helping orphans, buying medicine for ill people, or saving the rain forest. Sometimes, they even pose as representatives from real oranizations such as the British Association for Adoption and Fostering (BAFF).

So how are people supposed to defend themselves against these vicious attacks on even the most benevolent human impulses? Stay informed, and don’t believe everything you read. If you really have trouble sorting through what is legit and what is a scam, you can check out websites like www.lookstoogoodtobetrue.com or the IC3 website for the facts.

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This entry was posted on Sunday, April 6th, 2008 at 6:54 pm and is filed under Online Crime. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

No Responses to “Nigerian Letter Scams and Pets. Online Fraud Increases in 2007, and How They Did It.”

Joey April 6th, 2008 at 11:44 pm

My inbox is full of those charity pleads. Death to all spammers.

Kevin March 5th, 2009 at 7:45 pm

Super-Duper site! I am loving it!! Will come back again – taking you feeds also, Thanks.

Baron von Spork March 17th, 2009 at 2:57 am

Dude, I was just looking at the backlog on your site and saw this for this first time…don’t know how I missed it.

I’ve been following http://www.419eater.com for a while now. Some really great stuff. The idea is that someone receives an email from someone fishin’ for ill-gotten cash (the great majority of them are from Nigeria), and the recipient either reports them to 419 or begins a scam for themselves. The goal isn’t to get cash, but rather to get them to perform some act on video, take a picture with various props, or my favorite, get a tattoo. Check it!

Emily April 2nd, 2009 at 5:33 pm

This advice is really going to help, thanks.

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