Fraud Aid Solution Center Printable Document
|
|
Back to Previous Page |
|
Return to Solution Center Menu |
|
Print This Page |
Catching the Bad Guys
The very first thing to understand about your interaction with a scam network is that nothing you have been told is true. The names, phone numbers, titles, addresses, documents, and stories are all lies. The scammer is seldom even in the same country as he claimed, and frequently you believe you are corresponding with only one scammer when you are corresponding with 3 or 4. Sadly, the reverse is true as well.
It is not the surface information that leads anyone to the criminals. It is a painstakingly gathered body of evidence and hours of following leads that provide information about criminals.
The chances of arresting your specific scammer are very slim; however, that is not true of all scammers in an organized crime network to which your scammer belongs (unlike the Mafia system, depending on his level of expertise and business abilities plus associations and influences, a scammer may belong to multiple organized networks).
Yes, scammers do get caught by law enforcement and if your scammer contacted you by email you have one of the most potent tools available for tracking down the criminal.
To be effective, a Scam Email Report must include the Full Header, which is the path the email followed across the Internet from your scammer's computer to your computer.
Emails travel from server to server across cyberspace, and each time a server forwards an email to the next server it's called a 'hop'. Each hop is stamped, just like the post marks on the mail you get from the Post Office. Think of a letter that travels from Post Office to Post Office from South Africa to Seattle, with each Post Office placing its postmark on the envelope and you have what we read when we look at the Full Header.
But even better than that, the first stamp can sometimes lead us to a specific address and a specific computer.
Scammers have learned to play a lot of electronic games with email headers to cloak their location, so volume is important - the more emails we have in our analysis system the better. Please go here to learn how easy it is to file Scam Email Reports: www.fraudaid.com/find_headers. The steps for many email services are accompanied by screen shots.
Recruitment to join the scam group: In some instances, scammers have been known to make attempts at recruiting those they cannot turn into victims or those they have engaged in a long-standing relationship such as a romance scam. Should you receive emails with offers of enlisting you into the fraud ring, please contact our Law Enforcement Support Unit using cso@fraudaid.com.
Reshipper Scam victims sometimes have excellent information when have been 'hired' to forward envelopes or find themselves performing multiple tasks for their 'boss'. If you are a Reshipper Scam victim, please contact our Law Enforcement Support Unit using cso@fraudaid.com.
Solid information about scammers: This is a short list of what we look for:
· Bank account numbers listed in the body of a scam email.
· US, UK, and Canadian-based land lines. Go here to make the determination: www.fonefinder.net.
· Web site addresses listed in the body of a scam email.
· A situation in which you personally met with the scammer within the 12 months prior to contacting us.
WARNING! If you have been targeted by a Nigerian or Eastern European scam, DO NOT seek out or try to arrange a face to face meeting with the scammer to provide information to law enforcement! Scammers are well-trained criminals and will very quickly realize you are a fake.
This is dangerous to you because they are unpredictable criminals who can turn violent in heartbeat. On top of that, without a visceral understanding of the rules of evidence you will not know what to do correctly.
Baiting a criminal
can be a dangerous plan so please do not play games with your scammer. Each
time you correspond with him and others in his network you risk opening your
hard drive to zero hour malware or a root kit.
Zero hour malware is a piece of malicious code that has not yet been identified by your anti-virus or anti-spy ware program developers, meaning you do not have an update to cover it and your hard drive is not protected from it.
Rarely (but it does happen) a root kit is embedded in emails and is activated by your action of opening the email. A root kits downloads directly through your firewall and security software onto your hard drive where it can wreak havoc with your information and files.
These criminals are very nasty and far, far more experienced than you at conning people. It's what they do all day, every day. They will rapidly recognize your attempts at gaining information, will cease all correspondence, and may target you with malware.
© Copyright 2009, Fraud Aid, Inc., Global Rights Reserved