Law12 mins ago
A Very Clever Scam...beware.
I had an email this morning, supposedly from the wife of one of my friends. She asked how I was and explained that she couldn't talk to me on the phone because she had laryngitis. She asked if I shopped at Amazon and, if I did, could I do her a big favour.
This favour was to use my Amazon account to send a John Lewis birthday e mail gift to her friend's daughter who had 'gone down with liver cancer'. (Strange phrase, I thought)
£250 was the amount to send. Then, following emails were chivvying me to send the money asap.
I rang my friend and he explained to me that his email account had been hacked and the same message had gone out to all his contacts. One had actually sent some money earlier. He has had a terrible morning trying to sort it all out but at least he has managed to speak to his email provider who has now removed and blocked the messages.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Had exacly the same thing about two weeks ago.
E-mail seemingly from a friend asking me to buy a gift token to send to his daughter as a surprise. He couldn't buy one as his account had been hacked!
Fortunately there were a number of glaring grammatical and spelling errors which I know my mate would not have made. I also know that he would not have made such a request anyway, even if he was genuinely unable to buy the token, mainly because I know he does not have a daughter!
Other than that, a good effort.
I got one from a 'friend' who was supposedly in Spain and had been robbed, had all his cards stolen & could I transfer him some money.
He is a doctor, - in fact a psychiatrist, and one of his (not so mad) patients had somehow got my email address from his address book.
I smelt a rat, phoned him and he was at home busy working!