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i got some letter that said i won some international lotto?

i got this letter that i won this lotto from some british international lottery program. Does anyone think it might be a scam? i also got a check for $3,000 (not exact amount), and it looked legit, but i cant make out wether its a scam or not, can anyone help?????

i'd be really appreciated.

9 Answers

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  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    I guarantee you this is a scam! There are many Nigerian scams that are showing up nowadays. Please read the following carefully:

    I can guarantee you that if you listen to these punks you will lose every bit of money you have and never receive any prize money as such a prize does not exist.

    Another new popular scam is the lottery scam:

    There is no Overseas Lottery International, YAHOO & MSN Lotteries, Yahoo online dept., UK (United Kingdom) Lottery, Netherlands Lottery, British Lottery, British International Lottery, Thunderball Online Lottery in the UK, Australian Lottery, Spanish Lottery, Yahoo Lottery Microsoft Lottery (emmulating from the UK or anywhere else) or any other form of lottery you can win without buying a ticket. While some people might only copy and paste such email to their answer with a brief take on it, I will go into detail because I'm tired of this trash, as several of my friends have lost their a$$es to this scam. This is about as far away from legitimate as anything can get, whether it be a contest, promotion, or whatever. The Euro Asian whatever you talk about is a perfect example of how you can hand your lifesavings over to some fat-sweaty nigerian con-man (and your i.d. too).

    There exists a certain form of immoral degenerate that trolls the internet searching for suckers who believe that they have gotten very lucky and won a lottery which they have never entered. They will probably entice you to send an advance fee to claim your non-existant winnings and if you do send this money, you can kiss it goodbye. The money will likely be en-route to Nigeria, a cesspool of fraud that has been the center of these types of fraud over the last few decades.

    The best thing to do is to delete such emails immediately and to never reply to them. If you even reply, you risk having your email inbox flooded. If you call these people, expect to be harrassed over the phone at all hours of the night! In some cases, people who travel to claim their winnings in Nigeria are taken hostage, and in worse-case scenarios are killed when whoever is paying ransom payments exhausts their money supply. If anything online sounds to good to be true it always is buddy.

    By the way, I have kind of become an anti-scam activists due to the fact that I have many friends who have had their identities and life savings stolen from them via these methods.

    This is simply advance fee fraud (a prevalent type of fraud which continously asks for money to cover unforseen expenses) and is intended to drain your bank account, promising money that simply does not exist. Hopefully, this answers your question.

    If you have any more questions, do a yahoo search on lottery scams, nigeria 419 scams, internet fraud, or advance fee fraud. You can also read more about this at www.secretservice.gov and www.419eater.com!

    If you have lost money you should report it to the U.S. Secret Service at www.secretservice.gov

    Now you know the basics of Advance Fee Fraud, a multi-million dollar industry that costs honest people their life savings everyday. Be happy you weren't duped by this scam!

    I hope this is helpful, because I could sure use a best answer! I would appreciate it!

  • Thomas
    Lv 6
    1 decade ago

    Its a scam!!! set a match to it and forget about it. Have you ever watch 20/20 or dateline on lottery scam? Even the evening news had reported on lottery scam. There were 3 people let there greed take over and cost them every dollar they had. One person just retired 3 months ago and lost every thing. The second was a surgen living out in california. The third was a single mother with 3 kids, use what money she had in saving and retirement fund.

  • 1 decade ago

    You can't win a lottery that you didn't enter.

    Most legit lotteries don't contact you via e-mail. Certainly, companies you've never heard of don't go around sending people checks.

    This is a scam. Avoid. I will bet you anything that the check doesn't cash, and they will try to use it as an opportunity to get personal/bank/credit information from you.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    Sure looks like a scam. Take the check to the bank and see what happens.

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  • 5 years ago

    Yes, it is a scam. Lotteries work because people pay to play. If you did not buy a ticket, you cannot win. Never divulge personal or financial information to anyone you do not know--even if they sound nice and promise you lots of money. You will end up losing all you have.

  • 1 decade ago

    Scam mate sorry! you can get the check looked at it in the bank...but I dout that it is worth the paper it is written on ? I have had theses kinds of letters before...and know of others that have received them and It is just junk mail, they just go into the recycle bin...good luck !

  • 1 decade ago

    You've been spammed (scammed)!

    As someone mentioned, if you didn't enter, you cannot win.

    AND I wouldn't try to deposit the check. It could be another way for the perps to grab personally identifiable information.

  • 1 decade ago

    It is a scam.. you don't need to take it to the bank.. Did you enter that lottery? If not, you have your answer. You can not win what you do not enter..

  • 1 decade ago

    If it's too good to be true then it is.

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