by GomerPyle
Sat Aug 11, 2007 6:09 am
I've come across this quite a few times, and may be a good reason why these types of fraud/crime are massively under-reported.
I have contacted people who have paid out to scammers and the first thing they are likely to tell me is the good things they were going to do with the Lottery winnings. Personally I would splash out on a yacht and sail to Monte Carlo and sip champagne whilst admiring my Lamborghini on the quay side if I won a pot load of money - and why not ?
There is only one guilty party in a fraud - the scammer. Is it because the victim feels that they were stupid to have been duped ? Professors (I am handling one right now), computer students, financial advisors and very highly placed individuals have been caught out by these people. The only thing wrong a victim does, is to believe that all people are honest.
If the scammer thinks you are innocent, vulnerable or kind, he'll hunt you down like a rabid hyena, using any emotional blackmail or bullying he can think of. A victim should direct their hatred at the scammer, not themselves.
I have contacted people who have paid out to scammers and the first thing they are likely to tell me is the good things they were going to do with the Lottery winnings. Personally I would splash out on a yacht and sail to Monte Carlo and sip champagne whilst admiring my Lamborghini on the quay side if I won a pot load of money - and why not ?
There is only one guilty party in a fraud - the scammer. Is it because the victim feels that they were stupid to have been duped ? Professors (I am handling one right now), computer students, financial advisors and very highly placed individuals have been caught out by these people. The only thing wrong a victim does, is to believe that all people are honest.
If the scammer thinks you are innocent, vulnerable or kind, he'll hunt you down like a rabid hyena, using any emotional blackmail or bullying he can think of. A victim should direct their hatred at the scammer, not themselves.