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 | | From: | Chris Gunn | | Subject: | Foreign Lottery Scams | | Date: | Sat, 01 Jan 2005 18:04:26 -0600 |
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 | FOREIGN LOTTERY "PAYOUT SERVICE" PLUNDERS CHECKING ACCOUNTS
WASHINGTON, DC (1995275) -- U.S. citizens who have sent off their checks hoping to arrange for the transfer of funds from a foreign lottery payoff are finding instead that their checking accounts have been plundered without their permission.
The unauthorized demand drafts, in the amount of $299, are being sent by one of the biggest foreign lottery promoters in Canada--IDM Corp. of New Westminster, British Columbia and they are being honored.
Postal Inspectors say that U.S. citizens are initially contacted by a firm called International Lottery Payout Service (ILPS), also of British Columbia, offering to help them retrieve funds they may have already won. For a small fee of $19.95, ILPS offers to make the necessary arrangements for the transferring of funds between the lottery promoter and the victim's bank.
Bank account information and authorizing signature are furnished by the victims, but only to receive their share of the winnings. Checks are to be made payable to IDM.
U.S. citizens are sending off their money, say Postal Inspectors, based on promoters' statements that they are on a "winners list" with hundreds of other players. Promoters claim the pool is to share in millions of dollars in payoffs from various stateside and foreign lotteries. Inspectors say this is simply not true.
Foreign lottery tickets, prizes and related information have always been illegal when sent through the U.S. Mail. These most recent mailings, though not offering tickets for a specific lottery, do promise to payout lottery prizes to everyone in the "winners pool." That makes these illegal, too. Although many of the mailings have been intercepted at the U.S. border, many others have been delivered.
In fact, despite having intercepted and destroyed nearly 3 million foreign lottery mailings sent illegally into the United States since June of 1994, Inspectors warn that the foreign lottery menace is no closer to being controlled.
Postal Inspectors want U.S. citizens to know that playing foreign lotteries has always been risky business. Now there is the danger of unauthorized debits to the checking accounts of unsuspecting players. Inspectors strongly advise against giving out checking account or credit card account information to any foreign lottery representative for any reason.
Log on the WebSite at http://www.fraud.org, or call 1-800-876-7060. If you spot obviously illegal operations on the E-Ways please forward copies of the messages to NFIC at fraudinfo@psinet.com. +=======================================================================+ || The above message is auto-posted at regular intervals as a public || || service by the BIZynet(tm) international business network. Please || || contact Chris Gunn at cgunn@bizynet.com for information. || +=======================================================================+
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