The Nigerian 419 Advance Fee Scams - Prank or Peril?
The Nigerian 419 Advance Fee Scams - Prank or Peril?
The Nigerian 419 Advance Fee Scams - Prank or Peril?
Prank or Peril?
Harvey Glickman
Resume
Une enquete preliminaiIe sur la nature et 1'etendue des escroqueries par
l'intermediaiIe de courriels venus d'Afrique, et qui auraient debute au
Nigeria reve1e des effets plus importants que Ie multipostage electronique
excessif. Ces messages appeles "quatre-un-neuf" - comme la clause juri-
dique du Code criminel nigerian - sont refus par. des millions de
personnes essentiellement en Amerique du Nord et en Europe, creant
ainsi une economie clandestine considerable. Des offres frauduleuses de
partager des millions de dollars avec des beneficiaiIes depoUIVUs de la
moindre mefiance ont affecte des millions de gens qui avaient repondu
aux lettres, aux telecopies et courriels depuis les annees 1980, avec pour
consequence des pertes individuelles de sommes d' argent, des sommes a
payer pour se battre en justice, la subversion de l'activite economique
legitime et une contribution importante a une culture de corruption, pas
necessaiIement limitee au Nigeria. Nous enquetons sur l'identite des
expediteurs, sur 1'organisation de l'entreprise, sur la mamere dont les
reponses sont gerees, sur les contre-mesures prises par les personnes char-
Anatomyof419 "Come-ons"
People who actually take the time to read these e-mails would
observe that initial contacts trade on contemporary events but
always appeal to greed in rehearsing a variation on a familiar tall
tale. Nevertheless, a uniform thread infiltrates these solicitations.
Perpetrators seek to forge a bond beyond greed between themselves
and the reader, recently reflected in the vocabulary of piety and
CJAS / ReEA 39: 3 2005
people off airplanes .... We've gotten to these people and pulled
them out of potentially either harmful or certainly cash sensi-
tive situations and gotten them out. We're really quite proud of
that .... Clearly some people never ever come to the realization
that they've been a victim to a fraud, and think that one more
payment and their windfall is going to happen (Ruppe 2000; see
also Rose 2003).
Victims in denial then receive demands for about $10 000 to
buy expensive chemicals needed to remove the identifying marks,
to "clean the currency." Another excuse for an advance fee is the .
necessity for a lawyer to do the proper paperwork to transfer the
funds. Sometimes, the scammer offers to incorporate a fake
company on behalf of the foreigner, as a conduit for the money
(Murnaghan 2002). Another ploy requires a bribe for an official,
who is holding up the process. Forwarding one fee usually yields a
second, adding to already sunken funds, merely increasing the
"deposit" on a giant windfall.
A late segment of the scam, and the most dangerous, is the
request for the mark to travel abroad to meet in person, to insure
the confidence of the people releasing the money. My own experi-
ment resulted in such a request within two weeks. Usually, an
intermediary, a "disinterested" third party in a European country,
is suggested, one in which a foreigner might feel more comfortable
than in Africa. The Netherlands (multi-ethnic, officially tolerant,
and an international entrepot) has served as this nominated coun-
try in several published accounts. There, the mark would meet
with well-tailored individuals with fancy cars at a five-star hotel or
in some official looking venue. More money is required, for one
reason or another, but the big money is right down the street in the
depository company. Again, already sunken costs dictate one more
donation. If this does not work, the scam can take a dark turn.
The final stage of the scam involves intimidation. Threats to
detain the mark unless another, larger sum of money is forthcom-
ing have been reported. Several foreigners have disappeared over
several years while participating in these scams (Lin-Fisher 2002).
In 1995, an American was murdered in Lagos; one American was
ransomed in Johannesburg and another in Lagos, both in 2002 (Dey
2002; Roberts 2002). In addition, a Briton was tortured and beaten
by his "partners" in Nigeria in 2003 (Brady 2003, 13). Wizard
reports a particularly grisly denouement in Lagos. One victim was
470 CJAS / RCEA 39: 3 2005
Scope of 4198
To ordinary folk, these typical e-mails represent II delete" fodder, on
a par with the mailbox spam that peddles sex performance stimu-
lants, cheap Rolex watches, discount pharmaceuticals, dirty
pictures, and a variety of mortgage re-financings. Although most
recipients trash these items robotically, to law enforcement, they
represent the iceberg tips of illegal activity of global dimensions.
Up to now, only a relative handful of the people actually send-
474 crAS / ReEA 39: 3 200 5
Combatting 419
Increasing wariness regarding Nigerian entrepreneurs caused the US
Department of Justice, during a brief period in mid-2002, to secure a
Glickman: The Nigerian "419" Advance Fee Scams 477
court order to open every piece of mail from Nigeria passing through
JFK airport in New York. Almost seventy percent of the mail
involved scam offers (Weber 2002). Four Nigerians and two other
African companions were arrested in Atlanta in 2002 for e-mail
fraud and drug trafficking. Seized with them were drugs, computer
equipment, and false identification papers (Husted 2002).
Furthermore, two Canadians in 2002 were arrested for fronting for
Nigerians in recruiting nearly fifty cohorts to defraud others via 419
scams (Perreaux 2002, A4). In addition, two "godfathers" of 419
frauds from Nigeria, F.e. The and J.O. Onugoagu, were arrested in
England in 2002 (Penman and Greenwood 2002, 26). Finally, the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced the dismantlement of a
Nigeria-based phone scam, using a Toronto "boiler room" that had
claimed three hundred victims in 2001 (Canada News Wire 2001).
The US Secret Service, since 1995, has worked with the US
Department of Commerce, as well as with Nigerian and other
foreign authorities, to counter such operations. In 1996, the US
Secret Service, in cooperation with the Nigerian Federal
Investigation and Intelligence Bureau, arrested forty-three persons
in sixteen Nigerian locations, along with much evidence of fraudu-
lent practices ("Operation 4-1-9," 1996; see also Africa News
Service 2000). Stating that seventeen persons had been killed in
Nigeria as a result of 419 scams, US Congressman Edward Markey
(1998) of Massachusetts introduced, in 1998, the Nigerian Advance
Fee Fraud Prevention Bill. The bill did not pass, but it did cause a
brief flurry of discussion. Moreover, in August 2000, the US Secret
Service opened an office in Lagos to share information, technical
expertise, and some resources to help Nigerian authorities battle
advanced fee fraud and other Nigerian criminal activity, such as
money laundering and counterfeiting.
Scammers today are moving into South Africa, as evidenced by
recent arrests there of several supposed kingpins of 419 fraud - A.
Odonoko, his wife, and fifteen others carrying Nigerian passports
(BBC Worldwide Monitoring Africa 2002; Africa News Service
2002). One authoritative observer calls South Africa" Africa's capi-
tal of organized crime" (Ellis 1999, 50). Aside from the cosmopoli-
tan attraction of South Africa, the largest and most dynamic
economy on the continent, foreigners have been increasingly wary
of "Nigerian" e-mails. The economic and communications infra-
structure in South Africa makes all sorts of business easier and
478 CJAS / ReEA 39: 3 200 5
Notes
1 A recent example is a report that the US Security and Exchange
Commission, the Nigerian government, and a French magistrate are
formally investigating allegations that Kellogg, Brown & Root, a subsidiary
of Halliburton Company, was involved in paying bribes of $180 million to
acquire a natural gas project in Nigeria (Associated Press 2004, C2; Romero
2004, Cl,7).
2 Appendix One on my website presents collated information on 196 e-mails
received within a three-month period in summer 2003.
3 For another recent correspondence, see Roberts 2003, WK 7; for an earlier
correspondence that included meetings, see Wizard (2000).
4 This principle has been applied in 419 scams. For example, Eileen Parczen,
single mother of three, a Montreal resident, was told she would receive
twenty percent (or $ 7 million of Stephen Bedie's family fortune) if she helped
Bedie (then supposedly in Togo) move it out of the wartorn country of Cote
d'Ivoire. She received a bank draft of more than $65 000, drawn on a
Canadian bank in New York. As a self-employed seamstress, she possessed
just over $15 000 from her husband's life insurance policy in the account into
which she deposited the bank draft. Over the next ten days, she wired a total
of $16 000 to Togo before hearing from the Bank of Montreal (her own bank)
that the deposited cheque was counterfeit. Distraught after a meeting with
bank officials, she signed over the $15 000 in her account and added another
$1 000 in cash. Parczen then sued the Bank of Montreal, claiming it coerced
her into signing over her funds and acted negligently in forwarding funds to
Togo before the original bank draft had cleared (Rusne1l2002, Bl).
S Nigerian Customs and Trade Journal (1914, 189). I am indebted to Professor
Alan Frishman, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, for bringing this to my
attention. In the 1914 report, the prisoner is dying and wishes to provide for
the education of his daughter. The prison chaplain received the advance fees
and escorted the child to England.
6 A Pittsburgh newsperson in 2002 compiled 346 000 "419" e-mails received,
ten times the number of the previous year ("African E-Mail Scam").
7 In a top priority investigation, in the international spotlight, police are able
track down the sources of e-mails; see the story of finding the kidnappers of
Daniel Pearl in Pakistan, Mariane Pearl with Sarah Crichton (2003, 153-58).
8 A new, rare, and more sinister variant, primarily in Europe, is the "Threat
Scam." Victims are sent "notifications of assassination" from letter writers
purporting to be from an international security service that has received
information that the letter's recipient is about to be kidnapped and
murdered. How does one get these mystery murderers off one's back? Pay
thousands to the security service, and they will take care of it. So far,
however, there is no evidence the threats have ever been carried out (US
Department of State 1997, 24).
Glickman: The Nigerian "419" Advance Fee Scams
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