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I went to Nigeria to meet a man who scammed me (bbc.com)
305 points by CapitalistCartr on Oct 20, 2016 | hide | past | favorite | 246 comments



My mother in law is currently $150,000+ deep on a Facebook romance scam. I believe she's about to send him another $200k or so when her house is sold. Instead of living out her retirement in relative comfort, she will be scraping by on social security. Adult services can't help, because moonshot-level stupidity is not a mental disorder. She can't live with us, as she can no longer be trusted. She can't live on her own, as she obviously doesn't understand how fixed income works. It's a very strange situation to be in, having a parent desperately trying to abandon you as an adult, basically dying without being dead.

I don't know how these people justify it to themselves. They have taken 100% of her money, plus a unknown amount of debt (I've found $100k in loans so far). My mother-in-law is not 'going to be okay'. To be honest, once she figures out that there isn't $3.5MM in the Bank of Israel, she's probably going to look for the quick exit.

At the moment, I'm afraid I'm unable to muster the empathy necessary to understand how you could even begin to help the scammer.


Reading through your comments, I think there's really only two resolutions to this situation. The first is that your mother in law will run out of funds, and die penniless. From what you say, that seems to be where this is heading. However, the only other resolution I can see is that she realizes on her own what is happening. You can lead her to the water, but you can't make her drink it. Realistically, I see that happening in only one of two ways. Option one is that he admits to it being a scam, and cuts contact himself (or gets arrested for it). I don't think that's likely. However, option two is, as others have said, she could try to plan a surprise (or even a non-surprise) visit. If you propose this, I would recommend you do so in a positive light - don't say anything along the lines of "well, if he's real, he should want to meet, right?". Rather, phrase it as the next logical step. It only makes sense that two lovebirds should meet, after all, so she should accept it pretty readily, if you propose it as what's the next best step for their relationship.


The meet solution doesn't always work. My father has met a woman whom his scammer claims to be twice. I'm quite sure it's a man behind the emails and this woman has been coerced into meeting him.


Easier said than done, but option 3: he could go after the scammer.


I mean, that's probably the best option for society, but it's going to probably hurt his relationship with her.


When my elderly father was becoming careless with his money and giving it away to anyone he perceived to be in "need" ($1,000 or $10,000 at a time), we managed to convince him to give my brother power of attorney - ostensibly to make health care decisions, but in reality, the family moved his funds to a new account that dad didn't know about.

This was likely illegal as it was done without his knowledge, but it proved invaluable as it let us afford expensive home health care in the last few years of his life and avoided the need to move him to an assisted living facility (which he staunchly refused to do).

It took all of his retirement savings and most of the equity in his house to pay for it.

If he'd continued giving away all of his money, as his health declined, he would have had to be moved to a state subsidized care facility when it got to the point that he needed more care than family members could give him at home.


There is a point in life when like it or not, switching roles with our parents is the right thing to do. The hardest part is accepting that this is necessary.


There's an interesting myth that Joseph Campbell explained: A Victorian-era dinner table. Everyone dressed up to the nines, about to start a civilized dinner. When the course is served, you realize they were eating their children.

Sounds gruesome if you take it literally. Taking it mythically, though, the Father eats the Son, meaning the child becomes the adult.

Roles and life is not forever. There is a natural cycle to things, from birth to death, from one generation to the next. In this case, in switching roles, you truly become the adult, and leave behind the last remanent of childhood.

And when you grow old enough, it will be your turn, just as it will be for me.


this sounds about right. I advice to open a trust fund so changing hands is just question of setting up a new president


Sure, stealing someone's autonomy seems like the natural course of life.

As saddening as seeing that happen can be, stealing from someone "for is own good" is still stealing.


[flagged]


Perhaps, but I like to think that we made the right decision by saving enough of his own money that he could live out his last years in the comfortable surroundings of home while receiving the one-on-one care he needed to remain (relatively) comfortable. We spent his money on him rather than strangers.

I'm comfortable with the decision and feel that we as a family made the right decision for him and it's hard to say it was "stealing" when the money was ultimately used for his own needs. It was a gamble, he could have passed away right after we protected his funds, then the money wouldn't have been spent on him, but that didn't happen.


Probably not illegal, you are required to act "in the best interests" of the person. From experience with another family member who gave an outsider POA, even malicious POA actions are very difficult to attempt to prosecute.


That's some marvelous empathy.


[flagged]


Naive. There is no malice here aside from the one you project. Why are you conflating legality with morality? The father is clearly self destructive and going through legal ramifications to prove it does not serve anyone but the government, or one's self to cover their ass. Who cares if it's a father, mother, grandfather, boss, elderly person you care for, sister or other relation. That has little to no bearing on how one treats self destructive behavior.

Letting him have his money because he's your 'father' is no different an argument than letting X do Y because he's Z relation. It's a piss poor argument and doesn't hold.

"I'll let my alcoholic father drink some more because he's my father, and if I take away his drinks, well that'd be indefensible because I'd be stealing! He should be allowed to drink however much he wants. If I want to take his alcohol away I need a court order to prove that this is a morally acceptable act, because moral authority resides with the government! In fact, I'm worse than the punks around the corner who regularly steal alcohol from under his nose because they are unrelated despite crappy intentions, whereas my good intentions for his health and my relation as his son and son's should pay deference to their elders makes my act oh so terrible. " /sarcasm


At the time, his doctor and attorney said that while his behavior may have been out of character, it was not egregious enough to get a court order declaring him mentally incompetent. One of those professionals recommended (completely off the record and in literally whispered voice) the route that we followed.


So he was not mentally incompetent, and you illegally took all his money, and you still think this is defensible?

I'll never understand you people, thinking you have the right to touch other's property and decide their lives, because you think you know better than them. (and then collectively downvoting me to hell because I dare to defend the right to private property of mentally competent people and condemning theft)


It's hard to know the full truth from a truncated post on the internet with limited other context, but it's advisable to take it as it is and not project so much of your own opinion on it.

It's impossible to know the trust-dynamics in this family.

When I was a young child, my mother would regularly take money which was given to me as gifts from relatives and I would never see it again. I have full faith that whatever she did with the money was spent in more productive ways than I ever could, despite that being theft by your interpretation.

Going up this thread, the topic is that at some point the parent-child dynamic fully-reverses. Now the parent is less responsible than the child and the child may or may not need to exercise some authority in the parent's best interest.

The definitions of when this dynamic should reverse, of what "best interest" is, of what "responsible" means are all subjective but much of our world is. I personally put faith in my ability to judge people, and therefore by extension, put faith in my friends and family to generally help and intervene in my best interests when the time is necessary - I would prefer this every time over having some legal intervention and hope that it never has to come to this in my own case.


You seem to be confusing legality with ethics, or perhaps morality.

But in any case, since you're convinced he was fully mentally competent, then what was illegal? He must have fully understood that the power of attorney paperwork he signed was transferring full financial control. And it'd be hard to argue that the money was not managed in his best interests.

So if a fully competent adult willingly signs away financial decisions for his money, and those decisions are made, what problem do you have with it? After all, it was his decision to sign the paperwork, if a grown man wants to hand over financial control to someone else, why should anyone stand in his way? Just like in your scenario, if a grown man wants to hand over his life savings to anyone that can tell a sad story, why should anyone stand in his way?

Regardless of what arguments were made to persuade him that signing the paperwork was a good idea, the details were all clearly spelled out in the paperwork.


I'm here to say that you're not alone even when downvoted.

My grand-uncle (brother of grandmother) was always 'strange' for all my family, for the entire life, because he had some ideas unavailable to mere mortals that live their cooking-eating-relaxing lives. But when we spoke in his room full of books and maps, I was surprised how many things he knew and did. He spoke on 6 (iirc) languages and traveled a lot on ex-ussr territory. In last years he suffered a stroke and became helpless for some time and cannot speak with usual speed. Ofc family members took care of him, but now that they are stronger and faster thinking, they can laugh on his intents and not take his wishes seriously, saying he is dumb. It's all about cooking-eating now. Though recently one day he just went to train station, bought a ticket a met his friend in other city (800km). He returned succesfully. He is not an idiot, I visited him after disease and he is still my grand-uncle, the same mindset, just very slow speaking and thinking. Others don't give a fck. No, they treat him with care, but never seriously. That's hell.

Now, dear reader (not to kahrkunne, he already knows it), after you read that, I beg you, please stop supporting that awful attitude to a human being* who lived his life and now wants to spend his worth as he wants. Do not put your nose into his business, because there is a chance that your comfortable-cooking-eating mind just cannot understand what life is about.


Do you believe that every illegal act is automatically indefensible?


Have you considered that your mother probably has all the information necessary to impersonate you and acquire debt on your credit?


Parent poster needs to be very careful of this. One my friends mom had this done to take out car loans/cellular contracts because her credit was crap. Ended up defaulting and ruining his credit, and had his car repossessed. It takes years to rebuild credit and he got stuck with crazy rates for his next car loan (will likely pay 2x-3x worth of car). He refuses to have his mother arrested/report it as fraud to settle any of the previous debt, cause family.


The cost of co-dependence I suppose.


That is a a terrifying if not reasonable statement.


Time for a credit freeze


I am sorry for your situation.

For others who are concerned about this range of problems, consider the following issue carefully: elderly parents who for whatever reason compromise their financial and/or physical health are placing a direct burden on you. Although their debts do not transfer to you, you may very well be on the hook due to familial obligations. E.g. your MIL gives up all of her assets to a fraudster. You cannot bear to see her homeless - so you step in financially. Her actions are now reducing your wealth and quality of life.

One solution to this is to anticipate and discuss issues well before they arise. Transfer assets to trusts for grandchildren. Create living trusts where a child is a trustee. Watch your parents' financial accounts. Talk to them about common scams [Nigerian/IRS/Gift card/Email]. Train them to always confirm with a family member before transferring money anywhere.

There is also the option of pursuing Guardianship and Conservatorship should that become necessary.


I wrote above about the myths (as in folklore, ancestor wisdom, not "myth" to mean something is superstitious to be dismissed with prejudice) on role reversals. So I get it. Setting up trust funds and other legal instruments is sensible, and it is what I'm planning with my children.

On the flip side, I grew up in a Taiwanese household in America.

Culturally, such a thing is not considered a burden, and is part of the continuity of lineage.

What's fascinating for me is that:

(1) There is an assumed incompetency for the elderly

(2) Deeper still, seems to me a lot of people in America has trouble with death and dying.

Several years ago, my father died of lung cancer. I only got to visit him once, for a week. We arranged for a limited power of attorney to try to get the finances in shape, but I wasn't able to accomplish everything he wished for me. He wanted to make sure I had a legacy from him. I wasn't able to visit him one more time to tell him what his real legacy he left behind was.

My sister is an MD, and arranged for an in-home care. She financially took care of my parents even before my dad died -- bought a car for him to drive, bought a fridge for my mom to replace that crusty old thing, paying gas bill because my mother insists on keeping the house at 50F to save on money.

I don't think either my sister or I consider that heroic. It's just the thing to do.


Why don't you submit this as a blog post or pitch it to a news agency as an ongoing reality news story? It is quite detailed, informative and could help prevent future scams.

You (and involuntarily your step mother) would be doing the public a service and all this would not be for naught.


Is the scammer in the US our outside of it? If he is in the US, can you press charges?

If he is outside of the US, can she articulate the wedding plans in more detail? Has she looked into immigration law and things like that? Does she have a passport? Have they met? If not, how does she intend on meeting him? Which country are they going to get married in - and will the marriage be legal both places? I mean, I met my spouse over the internet (non-scammy) and the details really are somewhat of a pain, but was worth it for us... and we met a few times before marriage.

The gist being more that thinking realistically might help snap her out of it some.

If she comes around, are there laws that help victims of scammers that would allow for things like debt relief?


Lot of questions.

Not sure where he is located. She says that she met him for dinner twice in one week. At that point, I think she had given him $90k, so even if he was not local, the incentive to fly out for a week would be pretty high. As for plans, they are characteristically nebulous and not well thought-out.

I don't think 'thinking realistically' is going to help. When his VoIP number gets shut down, he messages her and says he got a new number "because his old phone got smashed". When I point out that you don't get a new number when your phone breaks, she shrugs. I showed her an outline of the scam and it matched her situation exactly. I showed her news articles (like this one), I pointed out obvious lies. I wish I could reason my way out of this, but I don't think that's the case.

EDIT: as for laws that help people out -> Not that I know of. You can consolidate accrued debt, but that's it.


Some of the questions are truly more from someone with experience doing the non-scammy version of 'online dating then marrying' thing. Was more thinking perhaps these sorts of questions might at least get her mind going in the right direction or make things over more quickly. I wound up switching countries, though, so the questions reflect that.

The whole situation really sucks, and I hope she finds her way out. Must be really difficult watching the whole thing.


I don't fully understand your situation, and it must be horrible and frustrating and painful, but there must be some way you can get through to her?


The first day he messaged her, we told her it was a scam to take window's money. Four months later, when we discovered she had been talking to him in the intervening months, we showed her a few websites that detail exactly how the romance scam works (matching her situation exactly). Last weekend, when we found out all of her money was gone, we had the police and adult protective services come out and tell her point blank that she was being scammed.

She listens, agrees, and then sends him more money.


There's an interesting concept I read about, how members of doomsday cults tend to believe MORE strongly after the doomsday date passes and everything is shown to be false.

It's something about cognitive dissonance.

I wonder if there is a known way to convince someone who is in this state. Cult debunkers and such might have thoughts?


William Miller predicted Jesus' return in the year 1843. When that didn't happen, he adjusted his calculations to mean March 21, 1844. When that failed, it became October 22, 1844. He kept modifying his prediction whenever it failed. You'd think being constantly proven wrong would make people stop believing him.

That's how the Seventh-day Adventist Church was started. A church that today has more than 18 million members.

You can't reason people out of something they didn't reason themselves into.


This is also how the JW's started, and frankly continue. The simple, sad reality is:

People mostly believe what they want to believe.


Once the snowball starts rolling, the later generations don't care much for the ridiculousness founding myths. It just becomes a traditional culture. Same for all religions, and heck, even nations


You could argue the same thing about Christianity in general; didn't Jesus prophesize his return to occur within a very short time after his death?


Whoever wrote the texts in the New Testament was clever enough to specify it vaguely. Short, for god, can be very long for you, mere mortal. Of course, there slipped an error in some of those texts where Jesus promised that this "short" means "within the lifetime" of those who he was speaking to. But, again, the Bible is so full of much more blatant inconsistencies that this got drowned down below. The believers don't mind, though...


The workaround for that "lifetime" bit is the claim that one or more of the people present were allowed to live forever. There is no end to the layers of explanations.


Its that part that gives meaning to meaningless life's. You are not just somewhere in the middle - another layer in the boneyard, you are the last generation. Being special.


Who knows. It's hard to tell at a 2000 year remove, when it's known that various scriptures have been heavily edited, redacted, etc. Mostly it seems like he was an early version of "Reform" Judaism that turned into a cult.


Any supporting materials to what you just said?


http://www.nola.com/religion/index.ssf/2011/03/changes_to_th...

http://www.npr.org/2011/07/17/138281522/how-bible-stories-ev...

https://skepticalteacher.wordpress.com/2012/04/22/the-embarr...

Beyond that, it's the entire history of the document, with the first 400 or so years being particularly amusing. To be clear, it's not like the same isn't true for other scriptures. You know that lovely story about Moses' birth? Just a ripoff of Sargon of Akkad's origin story, which was almost certainly not original.


SDA here -- that's partially true, but at some point he did realize there was no actual prediction in scripture about a specific date for the second coming. The church has made no such claims since the 19th century.


Are you a geek? Is there no way you can start impersonating him and telling her you've been lying to her etc


Or get her to start sending money to a different account, one registered in her name.

Aside from the fact that you're impersonating someone, what would the legal ramifications be of "stealing" from someone only to deposit the money in an account they nominally control, but aren't aware of?


the cynical side of me thinks some regional prosecutor would love to make a name for himself my throwing the book at you for doing such a thing...


Maybe DDOS the scammer somehow.


She's paying for companionship. It's basically prostitution. If you don't approve, find someone to give her more comfort than her courtesan does.


Well, prostitution is physically sexual. So it's more like someone who gets addicted to camgirls. However those situations are mutually honest transactions. In this case she's being deceived and lacks the strength of character or mental stability to fully realize that or cope with it. I do agree that she's probably starved for affection.

Frankly, an escort or camgirl habit could be cheaper.


> I do agree that she's probably starved for affection.

This. And I suspect she's paying for the appearance of being treated seriously and having her emotions treated seriously, which OP clearly fails to deliver by arguing that she's wrong. I don't have many constructive ideas what to do, but don't repeat things that have never worked in the past and pay attention to her needs, not yours, might be a good starting point.


This line of reasoning is repeated in every single thread about the romance scams, and it's enraging.

You have no idea what the situation is. This isn't some old lady we stuffed in an apartment and ignored on the other side of the city. My wife talks to her every day and we see her in person 4-5 times a week. She comes over for dinner every single weekend. She was treated seriously, right up until the point that she lost her life savings and started laundering money.


My armchair speculation, based on interactions with some genuine freaks, is that she secretly is shit scared of making a fool of herself. In front of you, in front of others, in front of herself. And I really mean scared - she doesn't talk about it to anyone, doesn't even think about it, just avoids this issue altogether. Every possible action, every idea which leads to thoughts of failure is rejected.

Remember it's not only quarter million bucks, but also her romantic feelings and her faith in this scammer and people in general. And her judgment and common sense.

So by some stupid fluke she took this risk and now she will do everything to make it work and prove she's right. The scammer offers her a path forward by promising happiness ever after, you guys don't because you keep telling her she will fail. This is roughly what I meant by "appearance of being treated seriously".

Probably she had never been that much of a fool, maybe she heard people laughing at others who had, it's entirely possible that it just doesn't occur to her that anyone could be understood and respected after such a spectacular failure. Especially if all the way along everybody was telling her she's wrong. Now if she fails she expects to be alone with it and have no one to understand her. So she can't afford her marriage plan to fail and will systematically disregard all of your advice which would kill this plan.

So what can you do? Don't listen to me, I may be totally off the mark. Don't care too much about her words, don't argue, instead pay close attention to her emotions. BTW, don't expect her to acknowledge them verbally if you catch her hiding them, it's going nowhere. Figure out what she wants, what gives her hope, what makes her anxious (probably most of the things you've been doing so far). Let her talk to heart's content about her plans regarding this scumbag and don't distance yourself from them (they are bogus anyway), let her figure it out on her own. She already has all the data to decide, but refuses to think about it. Don't treat her like a child by repeating arguments she could already recite from memory or expecting her to say one thing or another. It's her internal thoughts that really matter and you know none of it.

Think. Get help from a pro psychologist if you don't trust Internet smart-asses. Disregard anything that doesn't apply, it's all based on my observations.


I assume that was written by a secondary account from someone here. It seems to be a common way around the HN demands for civility... :-(

Regarding the victim, my guess would be on early stages of dementia and/or emotional trauma after becoming a widow.

But if I would discuss this with a victim, I would try bringing up the psychology of a scammer. First in general terms, like the Nigeria letters, then the specifics about romance.

To really hurt someone this bad is not far from the level physical torture. It is not easy for normal people to live with the self image of destroying an innocent person's life in that way. So the perpetrators of such horrible acts have to despise and blame the victim. (This is what scare me about hateful political idealists, by the way, they tend to think people contradicting them are evil. Not an American, so this was not about the election.)

So scammers and criminals really hate and despise the victim.

(This scammer wasn't someone desperate or really poor, that is partly another discussion.)

Which gets me back to the what I comment on -- "hilop" could probably get a career in scamming, he has the right attitude to other people.


The post seemed pretty civil to me, just straight to the point. Everyone else is trying to solve the problem by banging a hammer into the nail more - maybe THIS way will help you show her it's a scam.

In my opinion, it's worth considering that she is aware(at least on some level) that this is a scam, and she just doesn't care, because she's too traumatized, because she longs for companionship, or whatever else reason. It's impossible to know without having a deep insight into michael_h's life, but it's worth considering.


Interesting point on the psychology of "bad" people. Could this logic relation be inverted? If you see humans as evil, you are more likely to be a criminal or evil-doer? Thus Pessimism is the first stage of psychopathy? I weep for the species. Also weeping for science.


Sorry for coming back late.

I didn't study psychology, but from reading a bit and seeing people over the years -- I think there is a common thread with a need for perpetrators to dehumanize their victims.

About being depressed over humanity:

Compare clan societies with modern welfare states. The genes are about the same, so humans are really flexible from cultural programming. Just think about how to organize societies to make for nice places and nice people.

The point is -- don't weep for humanity any more than you would weep for cameras, because they might also be used to make bad art. Instead, wonder how to improve art education.


Good lord, just log in to her facebook and block the dude... better yet, change her email address for the account and then the password so she can't reset her password.


Done, done, and done. That was the first thing we did. Facebook was only the initial mode of communication - now they communicate by text, which I can't control.


Assuming her phone is configured to cloak the number in favor of the name, maybe you could grab her phone when she's asleep and swap the phone number for the scammer's contact with the number of your brand new burner phone from which you will impersonate the scammer from now on.

You could also record a video on your own phone as you swipe down through the scammer's texts as a crude way to archive them to study later so you get the impersonation right.


Any court will let you take power over her finances. This is a clear cut case. Just ask any bloody lawer


No, they won't.

We can take over her finances if she is declared mentally incompetent. She's not mentally incompetent - she understands everything, but she just disagrees with the crucial bit: that the dude doesn't love her and is scamming her. As the judge told us yesterday: we are walking a fine line, taking over another person's autonomy, but it's not illegal to fall in love and do colossally stupid things.


I guess the jurisdiction depends. In the UK you'd stand a very good chance of intervening. Indeed oddly enough there was an article about just this yesterday in the UK, i'll see if I can dig it out


If signed Power of Attorney paperwork exists already, the Court of Protection will grant it unless another family member objects.

You can literally buy the paperwork in supermarkets. Get it signed by the donor and witnessed by anyone at all, and you're set.

If there is no signed Power of Attorney paperwork, you have to persuade the Court that the person is no longer mentally competent to look after their own affairs.

Handing all of their money to a scammer counts as evidence towards that. But it's not absolutely guaranteed. There would probably be lawyers involved, and the Grant of PoA would be subject to messy and potentially expensive oversight by the Court.

Basically it's a good idea to get the paperwork ready well ahead of time, so you're not in a situation where you have to apply for a grant against a very confused person's wishes.


UK is pro intervention, but they also go too far seizing children from families. It's impossible to get right in every case.


(read to the end, I am not making the analogy you think.)

In the country where I was born, in my personal opinion (so this is not a neutral comment) startups are considered scams. Actually a few people elsewhere have expressed similar opinions. So, when you and an "online friend" get together and spend your own time and money, they consider it a scam. Like, if you are working with/for someone, they should be paying you! No concept of equity etc.

Now as we know, many stqrtups coasted by on "binders full of credit cards", were colossal risks. Adults have the right to do that.

Let's say someone tried to "get through to me" that there is NO SUCH THING AS SUCCESSFULLY RAISING MONEY OR A SUCCESSFUL EXIT. The problem is, they're wrong. There is such a thing.

So when you look at your mother's case - she disagrees with you. You are saying "this man is just lying to her" but she says, "no, no".

Well, ask her: does he talk about meeting her? Does he make plans to meet her? (I hope so.)

Have her plan a surprise trip to see him. It doesn't take much money to fly anywhere in the world.

If he is a scammer he will not want to see her under any circumstances. That will tell her all she needs to know.

What I mean is that you have to make her do something that is a differential between the two possibilities.


I'm not sure about the start-up analogy here, but it seems a good idea to me to encourage your mother-in-law to pay a visit to her supposed romantic interest.


What I mean by the analogy is that people outside of the startup can have the same feeling about the startup entrepreneur (e.g. thinking they've been mired up in a scam.) the difference is there isn't one in the startup case.

So do something - like visit the love interest - that differentiates between these cases.


Scammers can be very persuasive in person, so it's not a given that the scammer will ignore her.

I know someone in a similar situation. She's been abroad to see her "love" in Egypt regularly, and he's very attentive when she's there.

Of course they're planning to get married.

Of course it's love. What else would it be?

Works on guys too. I know someone else who has given rather a lot of money to an East European woman. I don't think they'll ever meet, because most East European women in these scams are actually criminal gangs. But we'll see.

Also, it's worth considering that these scams are marketing funnels designed to select the most gullible people and filter out everyone else. So the victims are self-selecting, because the scams are designed to find people with their particular psychological weaknesses.


But actual love is similar, so where is your differential? I realize you could have a simple answer, "is any money involved", but that would make many very good relationships that work out positively for both partners "scams" at one point. Does it also make every stay at home, or temporarily unemployed person a "scammer", if they are receiving financial help? You need an actual differential on love here. If Hillary starts earning a POTUS salary is her husband a scammer, clearly in it for the long con, since he even cheated on her!

So you need a much better differential when you sarcastically say "of course it's love".


It might be too late now, but I wonder if you could've convinced her to put the money into a trust and have it slowly distributed to her over the remainder of her life.

At the very least, whatever enjoyment she's getting out of helping this person could be stretched out for decades, and it reduces the risk she'll be out on the streets with no options. And if the story is the guy is in debt, usually creditors are willing to negotiate a repayment plan, so it shouldn't be too hard of a sell. You could even say the scammer will benefit, since he won't get taxed as much doing it this way.

Depending on the exact terms, you might be able to fit in a conditional clause on the scammer only receiving money while they're married. Which she shouldn't oppose, since it's the plan; but a scammer would oppose.


> It might be too late now, but I wonder if you could've convinced her to put the money into a trust and have it slowly distributed to her over the remainder of her life.

At which point? Before meeting her paramour, she wouldn't have much incentive to lock her money away from herself. (Would you agree to this?) And afterwards, well, he really needs that money...


But wouldn't that mean that you and your SO would inherit these debts when she dies, and there's nothing you can do about this? That's truly awful :(.


In the United States and most countries I'm aware of debts cannot be inherited.


I think most places, debts can be inherited voluntarily, but you can't cherry pick.

If your dead aunt had a Mercedes 190SL, but also owes $200,000, you can either take both or nothing.

But yeah – they won't end up in debt themselves, unless they choose to.


Yeah, my dad died in debt (Norway), and we were able to pick any personal effects of minor monetary value without issue, and then make the choice whether to take the rest of his assets and the debts, or neither.

It only really becomes an issue if you have a strong personal attachment to assets that have high monetary value, like e.g. perhaps your childhood home - otherwise it boils down to a financial consideration.


You aren't inheriting the debts - you are inheriting the estate after all debts have been settled. So the estate could be worth 0, but you'll never inherit a negative estate.


That's exactly how this works. Either you take all of it, debts included or nothing. Or in some countries you let lawyers sort it out first, where they make sure all debts are paid off, they take their fee, and then you inherit whatever is left.


I don't think you can inherit cash loan debt. You can inherit property that is still under mortgage (no problem there), but then it's a choice: keep the house and pay the mortgage debt or sell the house/give it to the bank.


You can't inherit debt. At least you can't be forced to accept it. (You can select to reject any inheritance, be it positive or negative)


Maybe in a country where such a dashed thing is possible, but I believe the OP is in the US.


In my father's case (which sounds similar to micheal_h's), the problem is that the more you give away the more difficult it become to admit it's a scam since you have to admit both that the love you're looking for doesn't exist as well as the fact that you've been a complete idiot. It's a vicious cycle.


Absolutely. I've heard the phrase "If I quit now, I'll have nothing" about fifty times this week.


I'd try to get her to buy an annuity or some other way of putting the lump sum out of reach in exchange for a fixed revenue stream -- maybe justify it as a tax thing, or what if she lives ~30 more years due to great new medical science, and then convince her to put a credit hold on her own account (to prevent loans).


Why don't you or family scam her first, and then give the money back slowly?

The thing about Nigerian 419 scammers is that , like most companies, the people you deal with are low wage call center employees, not the ringleaders who get the profit


That's not a bad idea. A family member could offer to help the next transfer by personally delivering the cash, just to make sure that such a large transfer is safe.


Wouldn't that constitute theft, though? The intented recipient is stealing, for sure, but if she wants to send the money and you pretend to deliver but keep it...


Yes, that's fishy. And if the scammer has some balls, he will talk the victim into sending the cops after you. Have fun.


In China, there are also lots of scams targeting on the elders, but it is also common that the bank clerks will call the police and the police will call the family to prevent this kind of transactions from happening.


I had a family member lose upwards of $300k before one of her financial agents contacted us. It was a "security system installation and monitoring" guy. Had done it to many people, apparently being the security alarm guy gets a lot of older people to trust you. Luckily we saved some funds and a pension to take care of her, but it was incredibly maddening. It was after another person passed who had kept tabs on her business, as soon as he passed the scam artist started siphoning money.

In my case she still trusted me and we got control as she developed dementia, but it took some time and money. If there is anyone else she likes or trusts more than normal, that might be the only person who csn get through.

I'm sorry you have to go through this, good luck.


At the moment, I'm afraid I'm unable to muster the empathy necessary to understand how you could even begin to help the scammer.

Is there anyone who can still empathize with her? Strategize with them to help her. Make them the goto person that talks about this topic with her while you are in the background.

One of the biggest lessons in my life that I've learned is if I can't empathize with someone, it is very unlikely that I can help them. Of course, this doesn't mean that I am at fault necessarily. But it doesn't matter who is at fault; the fact remains: if I can't empathize, I can't help (and most likely .

Since realizing this, I've found it much more productive to find someone who can empathize with that person. Often, this someone is a person who isn't as emotionally invested in the situation as you may be. It might be a friend of hers that she used to be close with a decade ago but has lost touch since. It might be her neighbor she loves talking to because he is always agreeable (so when he disagrees for once, she is more likely to listen.) I'd try to make a shortlist of such people in her life and enlist one or more of them to help your mother-in-law.


OP is saying they can't empathize with the scammer, not with their mother-in-law (although that may also be true).


I read it as unable to empathize with somebody helping the scammer, which is dangerously close to his MIL.


I think shes gone senile. Go see a doctor.


Probably not senile, but certainly a mental breakdown. Which makes 'seeing a doctor' easier said than done. She's not a gentle lady being tricked out of her cash, she's tenaciously ejecting her money to a dude she thinks she's going to marry, while everyone around her is making her miserable.

The whole situation is beyond surreal.


Can you talk more about when and how many times they've met in person?


I imagine she has almost certainly not met anyone in person, that's how these scams work.


No, she met someone in person, which made the whole thing a little more scary. They went out to dinner, twice in a single week.

From what I can gather, she met someone, but I doubt it was the same guy she's talking to over txt.


I've become acquainted with a few 419ers (Nigerian) during trips to Ghana (not the big boys, who are without fail sleaze bags, but the grunts, some of whom are very nice in person) and have done quite some research on how they and the scams work. When it comes to 419ers, they have a wide network across the world. They can get a guy to pick up cash or meet someone, today if need be. It might not even be a Nigerian, they work with other people as well.

Last time I was there, a couple of guys tried to entice me into joining them. Said I would be very successful, I could act as a UN attaché or whatever. Then they told me about a guy from somewhere in SE Asia, don't remember which country but I guess they have debtor's jail, because he had indebted himself and risked prison. He managed to get out and went to Ghana to try and get his money back. He turned out to start working with them instead, a couple of months later he had a mansion and three luxury cars. There are all kinds of crazy stories.

The thing is, most of the scammers and the victims are similar (not the romance scam but the Nigerian letters). They are after a quick buck and don't care much for morals (that's why the money is always someone else's, since by accepting you are entering a conspiracy with the scammer, and you are hesitant to tell someone about it). They live large and spend a lot of money, mostly on worthless consumer stuff like expensive liquor, cars, watches and so on. So the money goes back to the West (North, really) again.

I tried to convince a guy I have come to know a little to invest instead, to build something in his community. He told me about a scammer meeting his client (that's what they call the victims) in Hamburg. He picked up half a million Euro in cash. Took it to buy trucks and other machinery and sent it to Ghana and set up a profitable leasing service in Tema, the main harbour. Another guy built a small but popular mall.

I doubt most of the con artists have a good idea of what happens to their clients though, or that they think about it much. The workers are young and enthusiastic, and the big boys don't give a damn. Many victims turn mad, happened to a friend's uncle who got hooked way back when they sent faxes.

The trick is simple yet powerful - obviously the letters are made to funnel gullible people, but also greedy people with low morals. This would help the scammer justify it to himself. Another justification is that their countries have already been robbed for centuries. By entering a conspiracy, the client will be hesitant to tell anyone about it. After that, it's just the sunk costs fallacy, or "sending good money after bad". Every time the stakes are higher, but the choice is to keep believing you will get paid or say bye bye to even more money than you're sending, and accept the truth. It might also partly be an exploit of the looser bonds between people, where many of us have individual economy and are reticent to share our financials/earning/spending with others, even close friends and family, and especially if we suspect they might disagree.

Scammers are also quick to exploit current events. Last time I went to visit, one guy showed me a con he was working on which was a romance con. He acted as a British officer stationed in Iraq, who had come across some of all of the lost billions of dollars the US brought there in cash.

There are a lot of 419ers in Ghana, disliked by many but they spend in bars and hotels. They tend to live on credit though (the workers), only (hopefully) paying their bills after a payout. I'm not sure about the central police department, but the local police are definitely bought off. I know them via the innkeeper, a Ghanaian who don't like them much but they give him business. It's a crazy world.


Dude, you have GOT to write this up in muuuuuhuch more detail. This is fascinating!! You're a good writer but obviously these few paragraphs are off-the-cuff. Couldn't you make a longer version? I would be careful about your personal association (I mean can you write in a way that isn't linked to you), I hope you can do so anonymously. Very interesting reading! Thanks. Here's a vote for writing more!


Hey, thanks. Perhaps I might, not right now though. I'm not very worried about the association, these things aren't that secret.

I can tell you though that there is some more disturbing things going on in Ghana, with what they call Sakawa Boys. Sakawa is the name for online scams. Sakawa Boys are more into carding/skimming, but there is a way darker side to Sakawa which I don't think is happening with the 419ers. They are also much less approachable, at least to me, Nigerians (at least in Ghana) tend to be very easy going and open.

The thing with Sakawa is that it is tied up with juju/voodoo and dark magic. They will perform various rituals to earn magic, money attracting powers. I'm interested in magic myself but stay the hell away from this. It's hard to know what's real and how the whole thing works, but young men (around 20) often unemployed, poor and lusting for a western lifestyle, status and respect will go to a witch doctor to get magical powers.

The witch doctor will tell them to perform a ritual. It may involve snakes or other animals, but sometimes they will be told to kill a person and bring, well, body parts. After that they will get magic money earning powers. It's shrouded in secrecy and nobody likes to talk about this but I think it's similar to entering a gang, you need to prove yourself. Same thing which also happens in secret societies. It's a way of building unbreakable loyalty because you have done something unthinkable together. The difference with criminal gangs in the west is the whole dark magic thing. Really, it's just about power, bonds and hierarchy.

The thing is, you will see young men (the big boys, usually, around 30 perhaps) with extremely luxurious cars. In an area with people living in shacks you will see someone roll up in a Bentley, even. I don't quite understand how they make all that money. Even young men will have bags of cash. There are Sakawa girls too, who will romance you and steal your card.

This is much harder to know about because nobody will talk about it. I suspect it also involves the drug trade, since West Africa has become a port for cocaine from South America. Sometimes a boat will come ashore with mountains of coke.

There is a guy in the area where I use to visit who always walks around completely naked, in a zombie like state. He could have been 17 last time I was there almost three years ago. I was told someone had performed voodoo on him and he was unable to wear clothes. I'm pretty sure he has been given datura, which may well be the worst drug known to man (apparently, the British soldiers who fought down Bacon's Rebellion took it).

These witch doctors wield considerable power and are a huge problem in parts of West Africa.

Thanks again, I'll write something up when I get some inspiration and peace and quiet.


read this. also fascinating. yes, write it up if you find a good medium (hint hint) to publish it on.

question: you write in one point here "I'm interested in magic myself." You can't say that to this crowd if you said it I would stop reading your article for credibility reasons. So if you believe that any kind of magic or spells exist (that aren't tricks), then you should separate out this belief from your report, because (just telling you honestly) it makes you lose any credibility. if by 'interested in magic' you meant like tricks/illusion (rather than actual magic, which most people here would say doesn't exist) then you should be more explicit.

you've written a lot more interesting things here than even in your original reply. I am fascinated and hope you will find the time to write it up. if you submit it to HN you can refer to this thread where I asked you to :) very very interesting.


I get what you mean, I've been frequenting HN for years so I know the crowd. Regarding magic, to me it's not so much about whether magic exists but what it is. Sure, it's trickery, originally I guess it is what we would call technology, only wider, technology and psychology perhaps. It's about making things come to happen.

I guess I could put it this way, Clarke's quote ("Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic") is mistaken, any sufficiently advanced technology is magic, it's just that we are disillusioned.

I agree that it's more honest to be an illusionist than a witch doctor, but there are powerful magicians out there today, take Trump for instance, he's got the whole world enthralled.

I have just summoned tens of points to my karma account using nothing but my words, and I'm sure there are more to come.

It's not a big deal. Thanks for the advice though. ;)


from what you've just stated it's fine. What I meant is that there are people who believe you could levitate objects with your mind (like in the xmen comic books) and since you're writing about things that are already really, really outlandish it's SUPER-important not to fall into a comic-book style of narration!! :) If you thought you (or anyone) could actually levitate objects with your mind (and no technology) then it would make everything that you wrote about what you've just shared with us really suspect.

if you write it the way you've just written it, that won't be an issue. Just be clear that what you've shared with us just now already sounds like a comic book!! :) I mean, you've literally written that there are people who ask people to kill someone and get body parts, as part of voodoo. There are people walking around naked after being given drugs. The last thing that is needed is for the narrator to themselves also be suspect, for example by reporting that someone shows him how to levitate objects with his mind (no tricks and technology), and that it works.

So I really look forward to reading more whenever you write it up. What you've written so far is already comic-book style! But I hope you won't embellish and will stick to the facts. :)


I just want to remind you that it is you who are worried about my credibility, not me. So thank you for the advice, but I decline. It is also you who seem preoccupied with levitation.

Regarding the events, it's not comics. It's happening, and it's gotten worse the last 10 years. Voodoo comes from the deltas stretching from eastern Ghana over Togo and Benin to western Nigeria. Whatever it is they do they wield considerable control over people, to the point where big investments are dropped, houses never finished, parents leaving babies to fend for themselves.

But it's like @qb45 says, just google it. I want to advise though that there are many rumours as well, not the least because witch doctors have an interest in building the fear and the criminals want to instil respect and keep away nosy people.

Lastly, you come across as pretty rude to me. Just want to remind you that their is another person writing this, and I don't particularly like being talked about in third person and discredited for sharing an experience. So a piece of advice in return, think for a moment about they way you write about my writing having "issues" or what is or is not "needed", and it'll be fine.


> Just be clear that what you've shared with us just now already sounds like a comic book!! :) I mean, you've literally written that there are people who ask people to kill someone and get body parts, as part of voodoo. There are people walking around naked after being given drugs.

OP's stuff is business as usual, really.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_incidents_of_cannibali...

You have it all - magic, satanism, naked guys eating people on the street, etc.


Uh, remind me not to come over for dinner. Seriously if you think OP's account is, business as usual, well - you and I live in different worlds, or you've seen a lot more of the seedy underbelly of criminal organizations than I have! Which is what makes OP's write-up interesting.

It's interesting because it's first-person. The list you've given is interesting too but all over the map - OP can report as a direct source, in the first person, not curate information from elsewhere. (Which is why I think it's important for him to not to accidentally sound like he's saying he's able to levitate things with his mind or anything like that. his followup makes this clear.)

if he does write something, you don't have to read it - but I certainly will!


No, I have no direct experience with that extreme stuff, but I grew up in somewhat violent neighborhood. And to this day I have a mild fascination with all things NSFL ;)


Why should he care about credibility? It's you asking for more :p

And magic is a shit test IMO.


Magic is real. Look anywhere in the world outside of modern urban areas and you will find people who have experienced it first hand. It is true that every culture in the world has different gods and spirits, but they all have some conceptions of magic and a spirit realm. The existence and character of this phenomenon has been discovered and independently rediscovered many times throughout and preceding recorded history, but because of the conditions of their environment and because of their philosophical preconceptions western technocrats deny it. Magic is an antifragile phenomenon; it lives in and feeds upon chaos. It can't be tested in a controlled environment anymore than you can study primate mating habits in an environment devoid of oxygen. But in real life it works, and the only truly empirical thing to do is to try it for yourself, in the context of your own life, and see how real it can be.


> The trick is simple yet powerful - obviously the letters are made to funnel gullible people, but also greedy people with low morals. This would help the scammer justify it to himself.

I guess it also helps the client justify things to himself. There is money in people who feel guilty.


It's difficult. obviously if you were to intervene (for example by pretending to take an interest) to help, the scammer would realize what you are doing.

you are saying that your mother is not senile, and is just (acting) 'stupid'. But if this is the case, why don't you ask her about the details (excuses and so forth)?

Has she told you things like, "Yes, I realize that there are scams, but this is not one of them."

Is she otherwise intelligent? If she is intelligent and you got as far as her saying, "Yes, I realize there are scams, but this is not oen of them" then you could discuss rationally how you know...

the scammer could also kind of believe it from their end.


I don't know what are "those" scams but many scammers go very far, as far as giving you their cellphone number that works and they pick up, and even meet you in person. There are youtube videos of scammers meeting people and then called out on lie they just leave. I would assume if she paid so much and still have money, she is priobably on scammers vip list so I wouldn't be suprised if multiple "lawyers" and other scums meet her and show her papers that all is good in regarding to her $3.5 MM, it just needs more time.


Oh wow. Most of the types of romance scams I've read about involve the scammers pretending to be people in other countries, inventing dilemmas that require money while romancing the victim. I assumed this to be the case, but it apparently is not. That is scarier.


No you are correct, but those usually end up when someone pays few hundred bucks. I assume getting $200,000 out of your victim puts him/her in a special category.


Sure, but how do you believe someone loves you and is going to marry you without seeing them? Buy her a ticket so she can find out


People believe all sorts of irrational and outlandish things without a shred of proof, or even with proof to the contrary.


There is proof to the contrary that "startups work" and that working for equity is a good use of someone's time. I still believe it. It's kind of irrational and outlandish.

When I work on startups with others, this isn't a scam.

So your terms "irrational", "outlandish", "without a shred of proof" or with "proof to the contrary" is insufficient. You need to come up with a more polarizing differential that can differentiate between a dyed-in-the-wool scam and love amidst sketchy-ass finances.


There's a difference between a low probability of success that has a net negative financial value (startups, lotteries, America's Cup bids) and fraud.

In one case, there are just big risks that on average won't work out. In the other, there is no possibility for success because one party has no intention of following through on their promises.

If the scammer were actually in love, and just taking the money with the intention of investing it, but consistently blowing it in Vegas due to a gambling addiction, that wouldn't be fraud because he's still being honest.

It's the lying at issue, not the soundness of the investment.

And frankly I don't see many people saying "take options at a random startup to get rich, that's a good financial investment". Have you?


>There's a difference between a low probability of success that has a net negative financial value (startups, lotteries, America's Cup bids) and fraud.

That's not my point. if there's even a SINGLE person who is checking off all of the fraud checkmarks but is genuine, then it's more like a lottery.

For example, the famous Fedex story (you can google) where Fedex didn't have just a few more weeks of cash runway and would have had to shutter as it tried to raise it's investment round, and the founder gambled in Vegas to make their fuel run. Google that story.

100% scammer red flags - except it's real.

So, we have to differentiate. The mother in this equation is playing a lottery ticket that this particular person isn't a scammer. If there's even a single genuine story like that, anywhere, then that means it's a lottery ticket.

So it's not as simple as you say. For your question at the end, yes, I have seen that. :)


You're not understanding my point: fraud requires intent.


that's not a good differentiator because by the definition you have just given, any fraudster who themselves convinces themselves to believe their scam is no longer committing a scam. I reject that suggestion.

from the startup world, uBeam is a fraud, it's a scam: but it doesn't matter if their intent is valid or if they have convinced themselves to believe it. (I mention this as it's one of the only examples from the startup world.)

the legal situation may be different, but as a practical matter I don't think what you're saying is enough.


I'm afraid I don't see your point. You asked:

> how do you believe someone loves you and is going to marry you without seeing them?

How does one believe that? Well, they choose to. It might very well be irrational, it might be outlandish, yet they still choose to believe it. People choose to believe all sorts of outlandish things all the time. Sometimes they were right after all, sometimes not. Given that this instance perfectly fits established patterns of scams I think it's a perfectly fair assumption that this is a scam until proven otherwise.


That or a delusional disorder with a pinch of erotomania.


At some point you are just choosing medicalized word to describe undesirable behavior.


Hack her computer and prevent any further communication.


Lock it up in storage, refuse to hand over the key.


There is a legal process for declaring somebody in your family (elderly parents, developmentally disabled persons, etc) incompetent and taking charge of their financial affairs as power of attorney, have you talked to a lawyer?


We suffer more from imagination than from reality.


There seems to be a lot of commenters here saying Johnny is playing the long con. Whereas I don’t entirely disagree, I think they are missing the point of the story. The point is not just that Johnny’s life improved from below average to average. The other point is that Maria’s life improved from average to above average. At an age where many Americans are retiring and spending their days trying to stay busy, Maria is traveling to Africa and working with aspiring artists. Maria took what could have been a financially crippling event and used it to launch herself into a new endeavor. She’s taking her passion for art and helping others pursue a similar passion in a climate where they may not normally have that luxury.

Regardless of whether Johnny is still conning her, Maria’s life is now better because of it. She took a situation that would normally make a person critical and suspect of others and decided to learn from it and become a better person. My take away from this story is that bad things will happen to me. Some will be my fault and some won’t. However, how I react to it will make all the difference. Sometimes it is better to light a candle than to simply curse the darkness.


I don't think Maria _cares_ if Johnny is "playing the long con". That's what I like about it.

(Hell, how many 'normal' friendships/romantic relationships are "playing the long con", if you want to put it that way, call me cynical, but people aren't entirely honest with each other and take advantage of each other all the time, with varying levels of self-knowledge. It's being human.).

It does sound like her financial assistance to him is part of their relationship, just like that of, say, Donald Trump and Melania, or people who pay professional dominatrixes, or your aunt with the picture and bio of the 'african orphan' he's donating to every month.


I'd really like to understand your worldview better (and I don't mean that in a belligerent way) because I hope I can learn from it.

I really cannot muster any level of compassion for this guy. Sure he's poor, but he committed a planned, systematic, manipulative and horrible crime that can destroy the lives of very vulnerable people.

Just look at the current top comment in the thread for a personal experience of it. Somebody is systematically emptying that woman's retirement savings. This is not like a hungry person stealing some food or a bit of cash, people have their entire lives / retirements ruined by this stuff. I find it easier to have compassion for a pickpocket in the street than somebody like this.

And yes, I believe he really is playing the long con. I'm all for trying to understand people who have wronged us, and forgiving them too. But there is no way I could imagine giving money to somebody who had tried to pull something like that on me.

I'm not denigrating your way of looking at things. You are possibly a happier and less angry person than me. I just can't bring myself to agree.


Thanks for this. I don't understand the presumptuous armchair commentary concluding its a long con. That seems like the least likely explanation of what actually happened, and seems to miss the entire point of the article. Maria chose to meet and help Johnny and in effect willingly gave him a scholarship. Good for her, I aspire to be more charitable like that, and not be so pessimistic to suggest that someone's conscious willing charity and scholarship and financial aid amount to them being scammed.


> Although they have not met each other again since, she continued to provide him with financial assistance until he completed his degree a few years ago and got a job in the American oil sector.


That's the point though, he went from scamming people on the phone for money to having a college degree from a U.S. school and having a regular job with a legitimate paycheck, and now he gets to live in the states too.


I don't think it is quite a long con. Johnny might seem to be exploiting her my Western norms of social relationships. But if he has turned her into a patron of sorts, it is still out in the open, and he might sincerely care for her. After all, it would probably seem less weird if their genders were reversed.


> With her assistance, he left Nigeria shortly afterwards, to study in America.

> Although they have not met each other again since, she continued to provide him with financial assistance until he completed his degree a few years ago and got a job in the American oil sector.

Heh, maybe the 419 scam is continuing! The long con! :P


Reminds me of:

Go to a bank. Get a job there and work there for years and years learning the place from the inside, and also learning how all of the processes and procedures are done, earning everyone's trust and respect, and simultaneously building up a 401k with matching while also going up the career ladder and taking more and more positions with more responsibility and more pay until one day you finally decide that it's over and walk out the door like nothing ever happened!


Motherfucker, thats called a job!


For everyone who hasn't realised this is a Key & Peele sketch, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ly33QgeDphw



Reminds me of this Monty Python sketch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5tSr6xavNc


I admit I'm confused now. I think, but I'm not entirely sure, that you are making fun of the reply, thinking "that guy got a job, what more do you want?"

As I read it though the point was

  > Although they have not met each other again since,
followed by

  > she continued to provide him with financial assistance
the last part

  > until he completed his degree a few years ago and got a job in the American oil sector.
is completely unverified, and given that the whole thing was a scam to begin with IMHO certainly does need verification in order to be believed.


> is completely unverified, and given that the whole thing was a scam to begin with IMHO certainly does need verification in order to be believed.

That would mean he's also scamming the BBC.


Did they verify it? They only seem to report it. So you downvote me for raising this very valid question? I am asking, I'm not alleging anything. But there is no proof being shown and that's just a fact. I don't know why you bring the BBC in, nothing I read indicates they personally went there. It seems like they only talked to the woman, so what the BBC knows does not go beyond to what she believes. Is asking about an issue already offensive?


Reputable news organizations have fact checkers that check these things. I assume BBC is in that category, but admittedly haven't checked that fact.


I for one did not downvote you nor am I necessarily putting down your point. I'm just saying that if you're right, the BBC is also getting scammed. That makes it seems less likely, but sure, still possible.


That would mean he's also scamming the BBC.

The BBC reports tweets as news these days, they are not assigning their top Panorama investigative journalists to fluff pieces like this.


Tweets are news. The facts contained therein may not be. If Donald Trump tweets that climate change is a Chinese hoax, that's news. As long as the headline is "Trump Hoax Claim" and not "Chinese Climate Hoax" I fail to see the problem.


This is almost like the plot of Inside Man!


Or the Adventure Time episode "Scamps" [0].

[0] http://adventuretime.wikia.com/wiki/Scamps


Haha True!


Surprised this wasn't mentioned, but it's worth noting that traveling to Nigeria to meet scammers rarely ends well for the traveler. It's not safe. It sounds like she had a unique situation with an apparently repentant scammer, but these people are criminals, and they've already demonstrated their lack of respect for you.


Most people blow the risks of travel out of all proportion.

I have traveled to known "dangerous" countries and the locals are usually way friendlier because of that. Learn who to trust, make a friend, listen to the locals. The same skills you need in your own country to avoid scams and danger can be used overseas.

My experience is that most warnings (by people that haven't traveled to the country in question) are pure rubbish generated by neurotic fear of the alien. For example: Don't travel to the US because you will get shot.

If a Facebook billionaire can walk the streets of Nigeria, you can probably do so too.


Sorry for the late reply: I'm definitely not afraid of travel. In afraid of traveling to another country in order to meet someone who has just tried to scam you.


This was my general concern with the article too.

Sure this story ended with some positive notes, but it feels like they're encouraging the same behavior for others. Tourist scams alone are so dangerous. Other people attempting this is even worse.


I'm a Nigerian, living in Lagos Nigeria.

Internet scams are a big problem both within and outside the country. Part of the problem is that local law enforcement agents do not have the manpower and technical know-how to tackle the problem.

I'm deeply sorry for those of you whose loved ones have lost money to these scammers.

I'll be hanging around to answer any questions that may be of help.


Nigeria is #1 / #2 wealthiest country in Africa (GDP). It ranks amoung the highest in terms of advanced degree graduates in Africa. But it has a extremely low Human Development Index, there isn't much opportunity for the educated. Nigerians outside of Nigeria will generally be better educated than the local workforce but unable find work for various reasons. Common issue in Europe, where many 419 scams actually operate from.

This is a case of smart people taking advantage of the less intelligent / informed.


Nigeria is not the wealthiest country in Africa, not even close. They have the highest GDP just because they have twice the population of the second most populous country in Africa. If you look at GDP per capita, they're barely scraping the top 20 of Africa [1] which, as you can expect, is not very high. It's growing, though.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_African_countries_by_G...


Nigeria has a higher per capita than India, which is considered the #7 economy in the world.

What low per capita income tells me is that despite being a wealthy country citizens don't have a lot of opportunity to earn wealth. Which is my point.


Intelligent people with time on their hands an on the border of desperation makes logical sense that petty crime or white-collar type fraud crimes would extremely appealing. High ROI.


I think its the reason why there's a lot of cyber crime from eastern Europe.


What's the Gini coefficient on that GDP?


43.0, according to Wikipedia.


With a little humanity, it all worked out ok. Didn't see that coming, but awesome. Now this guy can be an unemployed American graduate lol.

I worked with a talented Nigerian radiologic technologist who abruptly left and went home to sell tires and car parts because he couldn't handle people being so cruel all the time (West Texas). I hope this guy has a better go of it than he did.


unemployed American graduate?

but the article says:

Although they have not met each other again since, she continued to provide him with financial assistance until he completed his degree a few years ago and got a job in the American oil sector.


Oil Sector... Being in south Texas, I believe I've made an incorrect assumption that readers would understand the potential volatility of such jobs, especially for a Nigerian immigrant.

To clarify, I've watched friends and colleagues gain and lose employment like crazy and I've seen a lot of racism in the industry, among other things.


Con men do tend to be practical. It'd have been much more shocking if he'd gotten a liberal arts degree.


Online dating can be rough if your brand new and a tech luddite.

A friend of mine just went on a POF date. Before they met up he asked if she was a prostitute because he ended up meeting a few of those who posed as sincere dates.

One thing that ticks me off especially Match.com and I can't believe I fell for it .. is that when your subscription expires they suddenly say this average to above average looking chick(ones i aim for) is interested in you. Their profiles are hard to distinguish if they are legit or not. Usually the fake ones are hot have a few pics do not say much and they are looking for a guy from 20 to 70. Also, the real fake ones ask you to send a message to their gmail. OVerall not sure how the crap Match pulls is consider legal!


I think the legit dating sites go under, and the shady proper.


Isn't this called a market for lemons? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Market_for_Lemons


Dude, nobody uses match or POF any more. Everbody uses the free ones and apps.


I have had people come to the counter and ask to send money to Nigeria and other places. I have to make sure everyone at that money desk knows about fraud.

Never wire money to someone you don't know. Never. [0]

Have you won a prize? Once you deposit the moeny, will they send you more money? Was it a tax refund? Is there a serious medical situation you are helping with?

[0] http://corporate.moneygram.com/compliance/fraud-prevention/c...

All too often the people coming in to wire money know the fraud detection questions.. and say our answers in advance.. "Yes, I met them," for example. Plus, these are regular customers that buy and return other items.. they are friends by work-customer-association.

They know the workers who refuse their transfer..

They know the system that requires suspected fraud and how we have to report it..

They still don't know how to spell the persons name, so they take out their rabbit eared email out of their purse next to their cane and read each letter out loud..

"I think this is a scam," I say.

"Can I talk to a manager, please. Now"

"I am a manager. I will not proceed with this transaction. "

In the end if someone wants to send money to someone they don't know they will find a way...


My father's lost (from my estimates) about $350K from a christianmingle.com scam. It's wrecked his life, both financially. He went from living in a very nice apartment in a very nice part of Munich to living in a crappy place close to the slums of Calais. I'm estranged from him, so I haven't been able to talk him out of anything, but I doubt I could have anyway. My brother's snooped on his email and IMs for the last few years. These guys are really, really good at what they do.

I wonder at what point the services which let this happen become at least in part responsible. I contacted christianmingle.com and never got any response.


Also, to illustrate how hard it is to sway their minds, my brother impersonated a lonely person on Christian mingle and got the scammer to start working on him. He showed my father their correspondence and my father was somehow able to explain it away.


reminded me of a family guy episode where Carter Pewterschmidt gets scammed by Nigerians and flies to Nigeria to get his money back and eventually decides to donate the money as he sees the people there really need it, or something like that.


"I wonder if it will change us. But, of course, it did change us."


Sounds like the Long Con became the Longer Con.


I really hope you are wrong, but did the journalist check the following sentence or they take the report at face value?

> Although they have not met each other again since, she continued to provide him with financial assistance until he completed his degree a few years ago and got a job in the American oil sector.


It's an egregious journalistic fraud if they phrased it that way when what they really meant was "he claims he completed..."

It would be a scandalous.


I guess it's possible but "put me through college" seems like a pretty lousy con.


Sounds like a great con to me. It's literally worth tens of thousands of dollars.


Yeah, it's a lot of money to commit to up-front, but it's oddly specific, few people are gonna agree to it, and they could easily just ask to cut the checks directly to the school.


How is getting someone else to pay for your schooling not a con?


Well, if someone says "please pay for my schooling," and you agree, and then your money is actually used for schooling, I think it's a bit of a stretch of the definition of "con" to call it one. Both parties are clear about what's happening -- seems more like a gift than a swindle.


A con is asking someone to pay for one thing and then doing something else with the money.


When it is an investment in the next generation?


Most of the time it's just called "parenthood."


Well, now I know how to reduce US students debts.


Some people trick the scammers into traveling places, or losing money. They've managed to get them stranded for months in war-torn countries, to sell their cars for airline tickets, and gotten them thrown in prison in foreign countries for immigration violations.

I have some family who was tricked by a scammer doing "Microsoft support" once, but we convinced her it was a scammer in time for the police to trace the call. So now he's in prison.


I saw an article a while back about an older man, college professor I think, who fell for some "girl" in south America. She tricked him to flying to Peru, picking up a suitcase of dope, then flying it to Argentina where he was arrested. Never met the "girl" and still believes she was for real.


The man in question was Paul Frampton, a theoretical physicist at UNC and the 'girl' was ostensibly well-known model Denise Milani


One thing I never quite understood. These "Nigerian prince" scams can originate from any developing nation where the exchange rate makes for very lucrative prospects. Ie, Chile, Egypt, Romania, Kazakhstan, China, India, Thailand, etc etc. Why do a disproportionate number of these scams seem to originate from Nigeria?


Success rate....

Also other countries have different scams. I ran an import export and frequently pakistan scammers looking for an business visa would try to fake a business with you.

They would waste hours of your time before dropping the act, annoucing they cant pay $ 10k and really just want to illegally work in your country.

Way worse.....one guy did actually show up after conning another guy successfully. Turns out he was legit in business but wanted to inspect wares first before wiring a ton of cash. That was a shock when he showed up on my doorstep. Imagine the nigerian prince dude you told to get lost ringing your doorbell 6 months later!!!!

Good ol alibaba chats...


> Why do a disproportionate number of these scams seem to originate from Nigeria?

We (Romania) prefer to steal credit card numbers instead. Less work and instant benefits!


Not sure if you're being facetious or if this is actually more prevalent.

I haven't been to Romania but did notice and personally experience credit card numbers being stolen in Greece, especially in tourist areas in Athens, presumably via skimmers.


As far as I know our guys mostly do it through online stuff. Basically script kiddies: high-school dropouts with nothing better to do.


According to wikipedia most don't originate from Nigeria, but claim to do so, which to me only ads to the mystery.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advance-fee_scam


There was an article from Microsoft[1] posted four months ago that talked about this phenomenon.

The takeaway as I recall is that filtering out potential victims who have heard of the scam as quickly as possible is the most profitable move.

[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11909111



Not surprising at all. This is all very rational actually.

The idea is this: Nigeria is a common place for such online scams. It is so well known, that only the most gullible and unaware people would believe and respond to the emails. And, guess what kind of people the scammers are looking for ...

Using a different place runs the risk of getting too many responses with a high percentage of those who are smart enough to soon quickly realize it is scam, so now scammers wasted their time on that.

They'd rather use bad English, really stereotypical phrases and so on. It is a good filter.


One simple explanation is that Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa. Also Lagos is massive city and has good internet (better than more rural areas) so you have a lot of people without a lot money, but a lot of time and relatively cheap internet access.


You mean cost of living / purchasing power disparity, not exchange rate?


Who here cannot say that no aspect of their own lives is not a "long con"? Not I.


That was great and unexpected.


Not a good idea. Its about 100x worse than tracking down your stolen iphone using GPS to find the guy who stole it from you and demanding it bck. Do not do this. Its not worth your life.


> She became consumed with what she describes as "a profound need to make a difference to the people of Nigeria".

Delusions of grandeur? She should move to SV.


Such online scammers were recently busted in India also


Reminder that most advance-fee scams do not originate from Nigeria. Such articles like this one stereotype Nigeria in a falsely negative manner.

>While Nigeria is most often the nation referred to in these scams, they may originate in other nations as well. For example, in 2006, 61% of Internet criminals were traced to locations in the United States, while 16% were traced to the United Kingdom and 6% to locations in Nigeria.[15]


>Such articles like this one stereotype Nigeria in a falsely negative manner.

Err, the author actually WENT to Nigeria to meet her actual Nigerian scammer -- and others doing the same. What stereotype? She doesn't say that most Nigerians or only Nigerians do such things -- but that's what happened to her.


Facts will not dictate this conversation! Fighting stereotypes takes priority over some facts.


Just because this one did, doesn't mean most do.


Who claimed they do?


Microsoft published a research paper on "Why Nigerian scammers say they're from Nigeria". Was that research paper a stereotype that painted Nigeria in a false and negative manner?

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/...


The paper is wrong. The reason they say they are from Nigeria is simple - "Follow the money." Those who don't have a means of collecting money from outside the country must mention Nigeria eventually.

Those who've been in the game for a while, have the ability to collect money from any country the "victim" feels comfortable sending money to.

Also, about the intentional grammatical error. It's not intentional. Many of them aren't educated. In fact, most learn to use the computer and internet on the job.


That research paper says that scammers themselves encourage the stereotype to reduce false positives.

To take advantage of the dissuasive effect of saying you are from Nigeria, you don't necessarily have to actually be in Nigeria.


Are you Nigerian by any chance? No?


Somedays, A.I. could scam for us.


We can certainly do the opposite: https://spa.mnesty.com/


I look forward to the day two bots try to outsmart each other in their own private bubble.


I think this conversation is that:

https://spa.mnesty.com/conversations/zvtbgexy/


Reminds me of Adventure Time s04e10 "Goliad", though said episode is about a creature, not a robot.


It's practically impossible for any positive tech stories to stay on the front page of Hackenews. Be it our tech companies making or raising a lot of dough and/or having impact.

HOWEVER, when it comes to stereotypes and cliche negative stories, we usually have our day at number 1

I wonder why ;)


This should be a movie. The screen play writes itself!


Most of you, including the OP and the antagonist in the story, have gone far from reality. It's all about cheat-or-get-cheated. Habitual exploitation!


"Johnny: "You talk in parable´s. I can´t wait to see you"" I would never write back to somebody who uses the Idiot's Apostrophe.


It's Scamming 101 to use bad grammar and typos. Can you imagine what kind of PITA would it be to scam a pedant like you? They don't want you to even think about replying to them.


does anyone actually fall for these?


Yes, constantly, and to the ensuing grief of their friends and family.


Reminds me of [1], where a scammer was scammed into sending a photo with a fish on his head.

[1] http://www.419eater.com/html/tope.htm


The 419eater forums are something else.

There's some incredible forum threads where members have perfected the art of scamming the scammers to such a degree that they can get them to travel for years at at time in the hope of a payoff, constructing such a pervasive reality bubble that they never suspect they're being played.

Reading the forums, where the members are posting in real-time what they're doing and the correspondence from and to the scammers is highly engrossing.

Prepare to lose a lot of time: https://forum.419eater.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=66

It's hard not to feel sorry for them, scammers they may be.


Haha, if you thought that one was good, check out this¹ one where the scammer is scammed into sending a lot more than a photo (although he is scammed into doing that too)!

――――――

¹ — http://www.419eater.com/html/joe_eboh.htm


Thanks! This made my day.


Can anyone explain to me why these types of scams seem to always originate in Nigeria? Is there something particularly lax about their penal code regarding fraud or what?


Not sure why you're downvoted for an honest question. Take a look at this research paper linked above by another commenter on why scammers say they're from Nigeria:

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/...


I second this paper. It's an easy read, even with its math. And more importantly, it's extremely intuitive: for me, it answered the question of if Nigerian scammers are already successful with obviously fake emails, why don't they just invest a little more effort into making the emails sound less outrageously fake?

The general answer: If the scam emails were more sophisticated, they would attract the attention of smarter, more connected folks. These folks would still end up bailing out, but now the scammer is out the time they spent furthering the scam.

But with a shitty, obviously scammy letter, you are only going to trick an extremely few recipients, but you have a much greater chance that they will actually send money.

The wrinkle that email adds to the scam is that only with email do we have a medium in which a 1 out of 100,000 response rate can still be profitable. Furthermore, there are no gatekeepers between email sender and recipient. You couldn't easily pull a Nigerian scam by spamming Facebook users' walls, because even the most gullible of those users are likely to have a friend who will see and report the scam.


How does this help? It will just lure people into thinking scamming is a way to lead you to america


Helping another person is hardly ever a bad idea.

Or in other words, don't hate the player, hate the game.


Basically if anyone you don't know in real life asks you money this is a huge red flag. Like red flag of all red flags. People should condition themselves that once they reach their pockets for money then something is wrong, stop immediately and reevaluate. I understand that scammers sometimes are very good and you don't need to paranoid towards people, but once real money is involved your guard must go up!


That's easy to say, especially in hindsight, but when it's someone you've messaged for 3 or more months, gets into trouble and then asks it's difficult to be cool headed. You convince yourself that you DO know them, and it's above board. Of course, like in this case, once it goes on long enough the penny does drop, but by then it's too late.


Reality is that many in the world have a disposable income of say $1 per day, so many people in first world countries are "obscenely" rich relatively.

I have been in situations where I have believed a few dollars will help a child, will prevent a rape, or will prevent jail time for an innocent.

Is it better to be a good person, at the risk of being scammed? The same happens with beggars - sometimes there is a genuine need.

I develop my shit filter by helping others, even at the risk of being taken advantage of, because it is worth the wins, and I wouldn't want to be a person that doesn't help genuine need when it only costs the equivalent of a few beers (or more!).


I wish we could get those texts, we could train NN on keeping the scammers busy.


BBC?


[flagged]


Please don't do this here.


Do what? I read the article and the song was the first thing that popped into my mind so I thought I'd share.




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