Information on romance scams and scammers.
by theresa c Mon Nov 30, 2015 2:27 am
Hi I'm a new member of this website I'm theresa apparently I have encountered an application for emergency leave for the military which I meet only in facebook he said that he will come here in the Philippines but in order to that I need to follow the procedure which is involved to agreement in the emergency leave there is a certain amount base on how many days I want to stay the US military man that he wants to meet me I need somebody else to help so that may I know that this is kind a scam I hope you hear from thank you.
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by Bryon Williams Mon Nov 30, 2015 2:32 am
It is 100% a scam. Your scammer is not from the US. He is a thief. He wants to steal your money. Everything he has told you is a lie.

Military members do not pay for leave. They earn free leave each year. Also only the member can request leave through his chain of command. His wife, mother, children nor internet girlfriend can do this. Also they would never have contact with his chain of command.

Military members have access to their money. They also do not pay for phones, internet or medical.

Military provides all meals.

Please stop all contact with the scammer. If you confront him he will continue to lie.

Post his fake name, rank and email address. This will help other women avoid his scam.

This is a warning from the Army about this scam.
http://www.army.mil/article/130861/Army ... nce_scams/

QUANTICO, Va. (July 30, 2014) -- Special Agents from the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command, commonly known as CID, are once again warning internet users worldwide about cyber criminals involved in an online crime that CID has dubbed "the Romance Scam."

CID special agents continue to receive numerous reports from victims located around the world regarding various scams of persons impersonating U.S. Soldiers online. Victims are usually unsuspecting women, 30 to 55 years old, who believe they are romantically involved with an American Soldier, yet are being exploited and ultimately robbed, by perpetrators who strike from thousands of miles away.

"We cannot stress enough that people need to stop sending money to persons they meet on the internet and claim to be in the U.S. military," said Chris Grey, Army CID's spokesman.

"It is very troubling to hear these stories over and over again of people who have sent thousands of dollars to someone they have never met and sometimes have never even spoken to on the phone," Grey said.

The majority of the "romance scams," are being perpetrated on social media and dating-type websites where unsuspecting females are the main target.

The criminals are pretending to be U.S. servicemen, routinely serving in a combat zone. The perpetrators will often take the true rank and name of a U.S. Soldier who is honorably serving his country somewhere in the world, or has previously served and been honorably discharged, then marry that up with some photographs of a Soldier off the internet, and then build a false identity to begin prowling the internet for victims.

The scams often involve carefully worded romantic requests for money from the victim to purchase special laptop computers, international telephones, military leave papers, and transportation fees to be used by the fictitious "deployed Soldier" so their false relationship can continue. The scams include asking the victim to send money, often thousands of dollars at a time, to a third party address.

Once victims are hooked, the criminals continue their ruse.

"We've even seen instances where the perpetrators are asking the victims for money to purchase "leave papers" from the Army, help pay for medical expenses from combat wounds or help pay for their flight home so they can leave the war zone," said Grey.

These scams are outright theft and are a grave misrepresentation of the U.S. Army and the tremendous amount of support programs and mechanisms that exist for Soldiers today, especially those serving overseas, said Grey.

Along with the romance-type scams, CID has been receiving complaints from citizens worldwide that they have been the victims of other types of scams -- once again where a cyber crook is impersonating a U.S. service member. One version usually involves the sale of a vehicle; where the service member claims to be living overseas and has to quickly sell their vehicle because they are being sent to another duty station. After sending bogus information regarding the vehicle, the seller requests the buyer do a wire transfer to a third party to complete the purchase. When in reality, the entire exchange is a ruse for the crook to get the wire transfer and leave the buyer high and dry, with no vehicle.

Army CID continues to warn people to be very suspicious if they begin a relationship on the internet with someone claiming to be an American Soldier and within a matter of weeks, the alleged Soldier is asking for money, as well as discussing marriage.


The majority of these scams have a distinct pattern to them, explained Grey.

The perpetrators often tell the victims that their units do not have telephones or they are not allowed to make calls or they need money to "help keep the Army internet running." They often say they are widowers and raising a young child on their own to pull on the heartstrings of their victims.

"We've even seen where the criminals said that the Army won't allow the Soldier to access their personal bank accounts or credit cards," said Grey.

All lies, according to CID officials.

"These perpetrators, often from other countries, most notably from West African countries, are good at what they do and quite familiar with American culture, but the claims about the Army and its regulations are ridiculous," said Grey.

The Army reports that numerous very senior officers and enlisted Soldiers throughout the Army have had their identities stolen to be used in these scams.

To date, there have been no reports to Army CID indicating any U.S. service members have suffered any financial loss as a result of these attacks. Photographs and actual names of U.S. service members have been the only thing utilized. On the contrary, the victims have lost thousands.

One victim revealed that she had sent more than $60,000 to the scammer. Another victim from Great Britain told CID officials that over the course of a year, she had sent more than $75,000 to the con artists.

"The criminals are preying on the emotions and patriotism of their victims," added Grey.

The U.S. has established numerous task force organizations to deal with this and other growing issues; unfortunately, the people committing these scams are using untraceable email addresses on Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc., routing accounts through numerous locations around the world, and utilizing pay-per-hour Internet cyber cafes, which often times maintain no accountability of use. The ability of law enforcement to identify these perpetrators is very limited, so individuals must stay on the alert and be personally responsible to protect themselves.

"Another critical issue is we don't want victims who do not report this crime walking away and thinking that a U.S. serviceman has ripped them off when in fact that serviceman is honorably serving his country and often not even aware that his pictures or identity have been stolen," said Grey.

What to look for:

DON'T EVER SEND MONEY! Be extremely suspicious if you are asked for money for transportation costs, communication fees or marriage processing and medical fees.

Carefully check out the stories you are being told. If it sounds suspicious, there is a reason, it's routinely false -- trust your instincts.

If you do start an internet-based relationship with someone, check them out, research what they are telling you with someone who would know, such as a current or former service member.

Be very suspicious if you never get to actually speak with the person on the phone or are told you cannot write or receive letters in the mail. Servicemen and women serving overseas will often have an APO or FPO mailing address. Internet or not, service members always appreciate a letter in the mail.

Military members have an email address that end in ".mil." If the person you are speaking with cannot sent you at least one email from a ".mil" (that will be the very LAST part of the address and nothing after), then there is a high probability they are not in the military.

Many of the negative claims made about the military and the supposed lack of support and services provided to troops overseas are far from reality -- check the facts.

Be very suspicious if you are asked to send money or ship property to a third party or company. Often times the company exists, but has no idea or is not a part of the scam.

Be aware of common spelling, grammatical or language errors in the emails.

Be cognizant of foreign and regional accents that do not match the person's story.

WHERE TO GO FOR HELP

Report the theft to the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) (FBI-NW3C Partnership) at http://www.ic3.gov/default.aspx.

Report the theft to the Federal Trade Commission at http://www.ftc.gov/idtheft.

Your report helps law enforcement officials across the United States in their investigations.

Report the theft by phone at 1-877-ID-THEFT (438-4338) or TTY, 1-866-653-4261.

Report the theft by mail at the following address:

Identity Theft Clearinghouse
Federal Trade Commission
Washington, DC 20580

Report the fraud by email to the Federal Trade Commission on Nigerian Scams via at [email protected].

For more information on CID, visit http://www.cid.army.mil.

Please contacta moferatorstor if you have a question or information about this post.



Please do not tell the scammer he is posted here.


Please remember the fallen. https://www.odmp.org/
by theresa c Tue Dec 01, 2015 4:26 am
Thank you so Mr. Bryon Williams for giving an information and advice with regards to my concern this is such big help for me
by JaneDoe1234 Sun Dec 06, 2015 3:33 pm
Hi there ladies,
I have been talking to a man for over a week now, whom I met on, OkCupid and he claimed to be a 'military man' who was a major in the US Army. This is one of the emails he sent me. This is pretty fabricated stuff and not to be believed.

"I am Luther McNamara 51 years old, widowed with a son who is 5 years, I was born and brought up in Turin, Italy I relocated to the states 21 years ago after the death of my parent, they both died in a auto crash on the same day which I was the only survivor in the crash. My late father was from dallas texas, while my late mum was from Turin Italy. I am a major in the US Army. presently I am been deployed for peace keeping missons. I have been in service for the past 22 years."

This is word for word, and as you can tell it is poorly written and clearly not true. How do I know this? He sent me images and my daughter suggested that we Google image search them and as we did, we came to this page and found the exact same picture but with a different story attached, This man is clearly a catfish and cannot get away with this. Some women may not have younger daughters to help find out these facts. I hope this will help somebody else from becoming a victim because these men are shameful. This website saved me from some situations so thank you!

Could somebody please tell me how to add photos on here?! Because I have tried but haven't succeeded as of yet! I really want to add the photos so I can warn fellow ladies.

This is his email for anybody who has been talking to him too. [email protected]

I have sent the link of this post to the man in question, so I know for a fact he is reading this right now. So, whoever you are, just know that you are a pathetic man with nothing better to do. The laugh is on us, because you are irrelevant. I am sure you will find new pictures and make up a new, and totally unbelievable story, but just know you will be alone for the rest of your life because of these childish and immature games.
Goodbye for now! And I hope to hear from you fellow ladies soon,
by Bryon Williams Sun Dec 06, 2015 6:25 pm
Please do not direct scammers to this forum or any other anti scam sites.

Your warning is now useless.

The scammer will take 5 minutes out of his life and change his fake name and email address. We will only find him again when a victim or potential victim post the new information.

Please contacta moferatorstor if you have a question or information about this post.



Please do not tell the scammer he is posted here.


Please remember the fallen. https://www.odmp.org/
by Southernrose78 Wed Dec 23, 2015 4:21 am
I met a guy that goes by Nicholas Young from tagged.com says he is 44 deployed in Afghanistan stationed at Ft Drum , Ny. Email he gave is [email protected] . I been trying to find out if he is real or a scammer. He hasnt asked for money as of yet.He insisted we talk on Hangouts because its easier so we been talking that way. He said tonight He wants to talk over the phone and asked if i could afford the charges. I told him i couldnt afford it. I mentioned i seen his name on scam list and he replyed he was aware of the scam artist and that the scam artist has been dealt with. I dont really know if he is real or scam. I wish there was a way to find out that didnt cost money.
by AlanJones Wed Dec 23, 2015 5:38 am
Hi Southernrose78, members of the military do not need special communications equiplemt to talke to friends and family, so if he has asked to to pay for something so that you can talk to him then he is a scammer.

Also, soldiers on deployment do not tend to be looking for people on tagged or chatting on Hangouts. Any free time they have will be spent talking to their family.

Please do not tell scammers that they are listed here - it will take them seconds to change their fake details and their new details will not be listed for any future victims to find.
by Luzy Wed Dec 23, 2015 7:14 am
Hello,
I've met this guy from tagged.com 4 months ago name Jacob Back. I been trying to find out till now if he's scammer or not because untill now he hasnt ask for money or anything. We just communicating through email. I wish there was a way to find out if hes real or just a scam..
Thanx...
This is the email he sent me before...
Feel we've got a connection already. I am an honest person that has no reason to lie cheat or steal or talk a bunch of shit to make myself out to be something better than what I am, I will love to tell you more about me. i want to tell you about by family. My mother's name is Melisa; my father's name was Lewis Back Both of them are late, they died on the September 11 2001 WORLD TRADE CENTER BOMBING, i came from family of one, which i happened to be the only child of my father and my wife died 2 years ago on a car accident but i have a daughter she is in the sisters convent. My dear i want you to know that nothing will stop me from loving you.

Am a US soldier of Ss 3rd Squadron, 71st Cavalry (Reconnaissance, Surveillance, Target Acquisition), 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Security Operations Group Division (OK CORRALL) my Assignments Before coming to Fort Drum, i served assignments at Fort Riley, Kan. Camp Stanley, Korea (1st Battalion, 506th Infantry); Fort Bragg, N.C. and Camp Casey, Korea.

I graduated from basic and AIT i was stationed at Fort Riley, Kan.i was then assigned to the Korean Peninsula as part of the 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, in the demilitarized zone. After leaving Korea, i moved to Fort Bragg, N.C. From Fort Bragg i went back to Korea before eventually ending up at Fort Drum, N.Y. My military education includes completing the Combat Life Savers course in 1992, Basic Airborne School in 1994, Primary Leadership Development Course in 1996, Basic Non commissioned Officer course in 1998, Air Assault course in 1999 and i Join bomb specialist/Control course in 2004.

My awards and decorations include the Bronze Star Medal, the Purple Heart, the Army Commendation Medal with four oak-leaf clusters, the Army Achievement Medal with three oak-leaf clusters, Good Conduct Medal 3rd Award, National Defense Service Medal (2), Korean Defense Service Medal (2), Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal (2), Kosovo Campaign Medal, Non commissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon with numeral two, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon with numeral three, NATO Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, Global War of Terrorism Service Medal, Combat Action Badge, Parachutist Badge and the Air Assault

Lifelong soldier. I was born to be a Soldier. I am currently living the dream and am a U.S. Army Soldier. I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. I cannot give you the formula for success, but I can give you the formula for failure--which is: Try to please everybody. ***Sound funny never mind****.

I love kids and pets. What do you seek in your idea man? Am a caring man, i work according to word of God. I am a romantic man, I love going to the beach, listen to music’s, love taking a walk, love going to the cinemas. I would describe myself as very caring a gentle and positive person, Very generous and like life and like meeting people. Have a good sense of humor. Life is too short so i live life to the fullest.

I have no serious relationship had like to meet a woman who is caring and considerate, someone I can trust and who will trust me and will always be honest with me, someone who enjoys laughing at the silly things that happen in life. Someone who is willing to share the work to make our home a comfortable place. Someone who likes to live in a tidy house too, I do not like to have things very messy. I am happy to share in all of the work required to keep the house clean.

If someone was like that and loved me for who I am too, I would be a very happy man. I am very happy to have a message from you, makes me feel things would be all right. I just hope we can find a way to be able to meet and chat always and get to know ourselves better and start from there, and thanks for your pictures I really like them. I hope you'll get back to me. Take care of yourself hope this will do my dear? I will be waiting to hear from you.
by AlanJones Wed Dec 23, 2015 7:21 am
He's not a US soldier, he is a young West African - there are a number of signs in the way he writes that gives him away. Romance scammers will go for many months until they belive that their victim has really bought into their web of lies and is ready to pay.

Please can you post any email addresses he is using and pictures as his other victims may be searching for those.

Please do not tell scammers that they are listed here - it will take them seconds to change their fake details and their new details will not be listed for any future victims to find.
by Rovina Perilla Sat Dec 26, 2015 10:41 pm
Hello good morning..I am very curious with this man who just sent a friend request to me via google Hangout 1 month ago. And worst I am still communicating with him to date. His name, accdg to him is LOUIS HARRY PAGE and said he is a 4- star General of USM who is currently base in Kandahar, Afghanistan for PEACE KEEPING MISSION. He will be retiring in 2 months now. Of course, I am not a totally dumb ass to date also, I am still expanding my research about the man until I found your website and correlated some cases similar to mine. I just wished I would get a reply on how to post his several pictures on google+. Like some cases here, he is acting nice and offering something for me for good although he is not asking money from me yet. And ohh, even a picture. Hope someone could help me how to start with this here. Thank you :=) :laugh-s:
by AlanJones Sun Dec 27, 2015 2:26 am
He's a scammer. Real members of the military do not randomly add people on social media and even more so for senior officers.

Just block him and ignore all further attempts to contact you. Please also post his email address for others to find.

Please do not tell scammers that they are listed here - it will take them seconds to change their fake details and their new details will not be listed for any future victims to find.
by Rovina Perilla Sun Dec 27, 2015 8:21 am
I see. Can I send all his pictures thru email? I can't attach it here. I just wanna make sure he won't be scamming other people. Thank you for the immediate response.
by HillBilly Sun Dec 27, 2015 9:32 am
Hi and welcome Rovina.

4 star Generals do not have time to talk on Google to people that they do not command, period. In fact, they will never even use Google to talk to people they do command.

Please post all of the information you have about this scammer, so others can avoid falling into his trap.

See this article about scammers impersonating military personnel : viewtopic.php?f=13&t=6527

see the bottom of my post for a link with instructions on how to post photos here

by Rovina Perilla Sun Dec 27, 2015 12:02 pm
Thanks again for all these information you're sharing. I am making sure he will be fall in my trap and get busted. I will post all his photos the soonest I will be back at the office. Thanks.
by HillBilly Sun Dec 27, 2015 12:12 pm
Rovina, please just drop all contact with the scammer like AlanJones suggested. He is a professional criminal and you put yourself in great danger by remaining in contact with him and your "Trap" as you put it.

He very likely has your real life information, and you only have fake information of his. Stop trying to be vengeful, or whatever you want to call it. Learn a lesson from it and move on. if you want to learn how to safely scam bait, go to our sister site http://www.419eater.com , make an account there, and get on the mentoring program. You are way too emotionally involved with this criminal to make good rational decisions at this point in time, please trust me. If you can't trust, please at least think about it.

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