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"It's a trap!"

Janella Spears lost $400,000 to internet scammers, after cleaning out her husband's retirement account, remortgaging their house, and taking a lien on their car.  (Source: KATU.com)

The letters contained many obvious typos, yet Mrs. Spears continued to send tens of thousands of dollars. A PI on the case says it was a case of obsession fueled by greed.  (Source: KATU.com)
Greed is not a good thing, as one woman's story shows

With 80 percent of Americans online, the internet has become the cityscape of the twenty-first century, and with it the good, the bad, and the unsavory.  Criminals, in increasing numbers, are flocking to the online world as a new source of opportunity crime, the modern version of the pickpocket, praying on those less tech savvy.  With the majority of Americans still somewhat befuddled by computer security, internet crime is a lucrative business.

However, in the world of con-artists and the conned, few stories stand out like that of Janella Spears.

Virtually all internet users have at one time or another received a desperate, if somewhat grammatically flawed plea from the "President of Nigeria" or possibly a banker in Bosnia.  The story varies slightly -- a long lost relative or government official in a war torn country needs your help, but the ends are always the same -- they need your account information to wire money into it, or they need you to wire money to them before they supposedly send you a bigger payday.

While most delete these malicious missives, Mrs. Spears fell for it hook, line, and sinker.  Mrs. Spears insists, though that she's no easy mark -- she's an active registered nurse, CPR trainer, and reverend who has married many couples.  She's even fluent in sign-language, which she uses to communicate with her husband.

Mrs. Spears, though, lost nearly $400,000 USD to the "Nigeria scam" .  When she received the first email, she read that she could receive $20M USD that had belonged to her grandfather.  She insists she would not have believed it, if not for the fact that she had lost track with her grandfather over the years.  She states, "So that's what got me to believe it."

The party asked her to send $100 and she complied.  Then they said there were problems, and they needed more money, but she might get more.  They worked up elaborate stories about how President Bush and FBI Director "Robert Muller" were in on the plans.  They sent her "official" documents and certificates from the Bank of Nigeria and even from the United Nations.

The scammers instructed Mrs. Spears to send $8,300 more, telling her that her reward would rise to $26.6M USD.  She complied.  Many letters followed, each promising more money than the last -- if she would only send a bit more money.  And every time she complied.  Many of the letters were rife with typos, and yet she continued to send in the money, in a case of obsession fueled by greed.

Over the course of the scam she received letters from the President of Nigeria, FBI Director Mueller, and President Bush.  They gave her dire warnings -- if she didn't continue sending the money, it could fall into terrorist hands.  Of course, all the letters were entirely fake.

In the end, Mrs. Spears wiped her husband's bank account dry, mortgaged the house they owned, and took out a lien on their car to finance the payments.  Despite pleas from law enforcement officials, her family and bank officials who told her it was a scam, she sent tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments over the course of two years.  In the end she had lost $400,000 USD, virtually everything she had.

She says it was the perpetual promise that the next payment would lead to the final payoff that kept her going.  It became an obsession.

A seasoned undercover investigator who worked on the case says that Mrs. Spears was blinded by greed.  He says the scam was the worst he's ever seen.  However, he says he's seen others, driven by greed, fall victim to the scam, hoping against common sense for a big payoff.

As for Mrs. Spears, she went public with her story, as she says it serves as a warning to others.  However, in the end, like most outrageous crime stories, it could have been easily prevented if people exercise a bit more common sense.



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Just Wow
By Gzus666 on 11/18/2008 8:55:40 AM , Rating: 5
She deserved it, what a moron.




RE: Just Wow
By FITCamaro on 11/18/2008 9:06:53 AM , Rating: 5
Agreed. If you're stupid enough to give it to them, I feel no pity for you.


RE: Just Wow
By wordsworm on 11/18/2008 9:22:42 AM , Rating: 5
I used to do telemarketing.

Ring ring, "Hello."

"Hi, my name is (insert name here), I'm calling in reference to credit cards."

"Oh, I never give my credit card over the phone."

"That's great ma'am/sir. Now, get a piece of paper so that you can write down my badge number, phone number, and name. Thank-you. You know, there are a lot of scammers out there ma'am/sir, and they're ripping poor people off on their credit cards, it's terrible."

"Yes, I know, it's terrible."

"Well, that's why you need to pay for credit card insurance. What is your credit card number ma'am/sir?"

"Oh, hang on... let me get it."

I made a ton of cash for about two weeks before my conscience overrode my desire to make money ($1400 a week is a great deal of money to give up, for me, but I just couldn't handle it). Of course, all American credit cards are required to have insurance automatically given to them. Unfortunately, many Americans don't know any better, and their hyper-paranoia makes them an easy target.

In any case, it's pretty easy to laugh it off to see someone get roped in and lose 400k. But I'm pretty sure if I called your mama and ripped her off of a few hundred when she's barely making it on her pension, you'd be blaming the scammer, and not the scammee.


RE: Just Wow
By Gzus666 on 11/18/2008 9:32:10 AM , Rating: 5
quote:
In any case, it's pretty easy to laugh it off to see someone get roped in and lose 400k. But I'm pretty sure if I called your mama and ripped her off of a few hundred when she's barely making it on her pension, you'd be blaming the scammer, and not the scammee.


Nah, I'd laugh at her and probably tell her she was an idiot. I figure she would probably do the same to me.


RE: Just Wow
By YoshoMasaki on 11/18/2008 1:05:34 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
Nah, I'd laugh at her and probably tell her she was an idiot. I figure she would probably do the same to me.
Exactly! Thank you! The fallacy that anything and everything goes as long as it is "me or mine" is so hypocritical it makes my eyes want to bleed. That's the reason we're in this whole financial crisis - greed and hypocrisy. "You and yours" are not automatically the victim in all situations, people. Get over it!


RE: Just Wow
By Gzus666 on 11/18/2008 2:07:44 PM , Rating: 2
Yea, I agree. I was complaining about medicare and social security to my mother one day and the general self entitlement in this country. I went on to say that I want them to drop all that crap and put more into education. She then said, wait, we will be retiring soon. I then went on to tell her eventually I would end up being eligible for it, doesn't mean I'm entitled to it.

Hypocrisy runs rampant in this country. It is that "but I want mine" mentality. It is like they regress to children when they think they are entitled to something. I don't deserve hand outs, neither does anyone else. If I do something stupid, my fault, not someone else's.


RE: Just Wow
By Oregonian2 on 11/19/2008 1:50:05 AM , Rating: 5
Although those programs are actually run as pay-as-you-go ones there is some validity I think to someone saying that they paid $200,000 into medicare and social security over their working lifetimes and so they are entitled to receive some of that back.


RE: Just Wow
By Gzus666 on 11/19/08, Rating: -1
RE: Just Wow
By Oregonian2 on 11/19/2008 6:58:35 PM , Rating: 2
You also didn't read what I wrote. It's still a good valid statement even if it's blowing in the wind.


RE: Just Wow
By Jaybus on 11/18/08, Rating: 0
RE: Just Wow
By murphyslabrat on 11/18/08, Rating: -1
RE: Just Wow
By Frank M on 11/18/2008 11:03:22 AM , Rating: 5
There's a pretty big distinction between the two. This woman was tricked because she was greedy and stupid. She made the decision to send her money, because she thought that it would lead to more easy money.

The woman in your scenario made no such choice.


RE: Just Wow
By afkrotch on 11/18/2008 11:42:43 AM , Rating: 5
Stupid greedy ppl you mean. They kind of fit together with the thieves. If they weren't greedy and were still stupid, odds are high, they wouldn't fall for the scam.

These scams aren't targeting physical aspects of a person. They are targeting their intelligence level and values. Quite different from a 220 lbs man attacking a 120 lbs woman.

If the 220 lbs man came over to the woman and pulled the same type of scam, but instead of on a computer, he did it irl, then I'd say she deserved it.

What happened to listening to the old phrase of "if it sounds too good to be true, it usually is." I must have heard this phrase like a hundred times this year and thousands of times during my life.


RE: Just Wow
By Suntan on 11/18/2008 1:39:47 PM , Rating: 5
Maybe if the 220 lb man had a sign on his car door that said, "throw purse thru open passenger window and I'll put $20 in it."

Your analogy isn't the same thing as the topic at hand.

-Suntan


RE: Just Wow
By Seemonkeyscanfly on 11/21/2008 4:23:07 PM , Rating: 1
What if it was a 215 lb man and a 125 lb woman... would that change everything???


RE: Just Wow
By dosun on 11/18/2008 4:03:52 PM , Rating: 5
Did you miss this part in the article?
quote:
Despite pleas from law enforcement officials, her family and bank officials who told her it was a scam, she sent tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments over the course of two years.


If she had sent money only once, I'd be some of us would feel pity for her. This lady sent money multiple times over the course of a couple years, even after multiple people told her it was a scam. Now her husband's retirement account is empty because of her stupidity. As the old saying goes "fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me."


RE: Just Wow
By Indianapolis on 11/18/2008 11:51:13 PM , Rating: 5
quote:
As the old saying goes "fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me."


I believe the correct saying is:

"Fool me once, shame...shame on...you. Fool me—can't get fooled again!"

From what I understand, it comes from Texas. Or maybe Tennessee.


RE: Just Wow
By FITCamaro on 11/18/2008 12:06:09 PM , Rating: 2
My parents don't have a few thousands dollars to give away much less a few hundred thousand.

My mom I'd never have to worry about anyway. My dad's another story but even he's not that stupid.