| 419?
IS
A DEVIL
Don't
Fall a Victim Being Greedy And / Or Gullible
Nigerian
Police Force
What
is It!
Advance
Fee Fraud, otherwise known as 419 in Nigeria simply means the
demand for and payment to an advance fee in form of tax, brokerage,
bribe, etc under the pretence that such is needed to consummate
a business deal whether the business in itself is genuine or not.
The term 419 derives from section 419 of the Nigeria Criminal Code,
which dealt with this offence before the promulgation of the Advance
Fee Fraud Decree No 13 in 1995.
Advance
Fee Fraud is introduced to intended victims
through scam letters containing false information on: -
-
Millions
of Dollars from over invoiced contracts in Nigeria.
-
Millions
of Dollars from funds left by deceased persons.
-
Contracts
for the purchase of vehicles, computers and accessories, medical
equipment, etc all running into millions of Dollars.
-
The
sale of Crude oil.
Requests
are initially simply and easily accomplished by unsuspecting
minds, and are a natural extension of scam letters, which contain
the sort of information mentioned above. These letters are tempting,
as they tend to show the ease with which money can accrue to the
addressees. Thus when items such as particulars of bankers, Company
letter head stationeries and blank Company proforma invoices are
asked for, they are usually received.
Writers
of Fraudulent (scam) letters often purport to be persons of
social distinction giving themselves bogus prefixes such as Alhaji,
Doctor, Prince, Engineer, Chief, HRH (His Royal Highness) etc. They
also lay claim to positions of high status as in being Chief Executive
Officers, Chairmen, and Executive Directors etc. These positions
are claimed to be held in Government offices such as the Federal
Ministry of Finance (FMF), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Nigeria
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Nigeria Security Printing
& Minting Company (NSPMC), Nigeria Telecommunications (NITEL),
Nigeria Postal Services (NIPOST), Ministry of Defence (MOD), etc.
The
purported advantage of such proposals lies in the making of
huge monetary gains with minimal effort or input. In the case of
transfer of funds, there is the inducement of a commission of between
thirty to forty percent of the total amount involved to the benefit
of the addressee.
Advance
Fee Fraud demands surface soon after a link with a would be
victim has been made, and normal course of communication established.
Series of demands for money are made under several guises, one demand
metamorphosing to the other until the victim is unwilling to make
further payments in the apparent realisation of deceit in the whole
transaction.
Such
guises include request for: -
-
5%
Remittance fee
-
1%
legal charges
-
Job
completion certificate charges
-
3%
National Economic recovery Fund Tax
-
Inheritance
tax (in the case of funds supposedly emanating from Wills),
and
-
Value
Added Tax (VAT) Revenue Tax amongst others.
*Note
that these demands do not exist in normal and actual Government
contracts. They are a part of the usual ploy to extort money from
unsuspecting victims.
The
victims targeted by Advance Fee Fraudsters are in the main,
foreign nationals who are invited to the country by fraudulent letters,
and investors who having arrived the country for genuine business
are schemed into fraudulent and frivolous transactions ostensibly
to defraud them. Information about such foreigners are easily and
usually obtained from catalogues of foreign companies.
What
to Do
Upon
the receipt of any letter suggesting the inference that it could
be fraudulent going by the above analysis, take any of the following
actions as applicable: -
-
Report
immediately to the Local Police Authorities nearest to you.
-
Report
to the Nigeria Mission in your country.
-
If
you must respond, reply negatively and terminate communication.
-
Send
back the scam letter to any of the following addresses in Nigeria
(a)
The Assist. Inspector General of Police
“D”
Department,
The
Nigeria Police,
Alagbon
Close,
Ikoyi
– Lagos.
(b)
The Commissioner of Police,
Special
Fraud Unit,
D
Department,
13
Milverton Road,
Ikoyi
– Lagos.
Tel
Nos. + 234 1 269 2728
+ 234 1 269 1675
Fax
No. + 234 1 269 1095
(C)
National Intelligence Agency,
P.M.B.
213
Garki
– Abuja.
Where
you find yourself in Nigeria and probably unaware of the fraudulent
nature of the transaction you are pursuing, promptly report your
presence giving details of flight, hotel accommodation and other
relevant information to any of the officers listed above, or the
nearest Police Station or your Embassy for security reasons.
What
Not to Do
-
Do
not respond to the scam letters either by mail, fax or telephone.
-
Do
not agree to any proposed meeting whether it is to take place
in your country, another country or Nigeria.
-
Do
not part with your money under any circumstances.
-
Do
not reveal or give out your bank account number you could be
duped.
-
Do
not be convinced by documents carrying insignia/logo of Federal
Government of Nigeria, Central Bank of Nigeria, Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, or any other Nigeria Government Agency.
Such documents are faked or forged.
-
Do
not accept proposals for remittance of money into your bank
account. There is no money to be remitted.
-
Ensure
security of your vital documents relating to Banks accounts,
International Passports, identity cards, fax/telephone numbers,
Insurance Certificates, company letter head papers, contractual
agreements etc.
-
Do
not prolong communication as this may convince and lure you
into an avoidable mess.
-
Do
not give out documents or other information about yourself or
business especially bank passports particulars as this may serve
as the basis for fraud.
Latest
Government Measures Against Advance Fee Fraud
-
Closure
by Nigeria Telecommunication (NITEL) of all telephone business
centres all over Nigeria. This was necessitated by the fact
that an over-whelming percentage of communication between fraudsters
and their victims were through these centres.
-
Withdrawal
of the International Direct Dialling (IDD) facilities from the
public.
-
Enlightenment
programmes through adverts by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
and other Government agencies.
-
Collation
of telephone numbers subscribed to by fraudsters (as in the
attached list), and subsequent investigation of their activities
by the Police.
-
Commencement
of trials of fraudsters in the Miscellaneous Offences Tribunal,
as opposed to the regular Courts.
-
The
approval of the use of Police as prosecutors in the above mentioned
Tribunal.
F.V.M.
Waziri LL.B, BL (Mrs)
Commissioner
of Police,
Special
Fraud Unit,
The
Nigeria Police.
OPENBARE
MEDEDELING BETREFFENDE
VOORSTELLEN
TOT ZAKELIJKE ZWENDEL 
(Public
information on Fraud )
Office
of the President's Warning 
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