THE LIBERTARIAN
His
White Scarf Streaming Out Behind ...
by
Vin Suprynowicz
"Even
someone suffering from end-stage syphilis-induced insanity would
not fall for such a transparent scam. Right?" asks Morrock
News columnist John David Powell.
"Wrong.
The U.S. Secret Service says hundreds of millions of dollars are
lost each year to this scheme, and the toll is mounting. ...
"It’s
called the Advance Fee Fraud, or the 4-1-9 scheme, named for the
section in the Nigerian penal code that addresses fraud scams. The
4-1-9 is so widespread and successful that the Secret Service has
set up ‘Operation 4-1-9’ within its Financial Crimes Division. Each
day they receive about 100 telephone calls from victims or potential
victims and as many as 500 letters or faxes. Agents have been assigned
to the U.S. Embassy in Lagos to address the problem and to help
larcenous and stupid U.S. businessmen get out of the country. ...
An American participant was murdered in 1995," Powell reports.
You
get an e-mail from someone in Africa, proposing to defraud the local
authorities of their share of millions of dollars. They just need
an overseas co-conspirator with a bank account into which they can
shovel the loot by international wire transfer. But they don’t know
any foreigners, so they got your name from the "Chamber of
Commerce." For a 30 or 35 percent share, all you have to do
is send them your bank account number, name, address, phone ...
Personally,
I’ve received so many of the offers I now have a separate e-mailbox
named "African Opportunities."
An
early one came from one Fatima Dengo, "the daughter of Dr.
S.J. Dengo, who was the director, International Remittance Central
Bank of Sierra-Leone until he was assassinated by the rebel junta.
..."
Ms.
Dengo had $35 million which she needed to my help to get out of
the Republic of Togo.
Then
came Mrs. Mariam Abacha (impressively introduced by her attorney,
"Mike Ugboma.") The "widow of the late Gen. Sanni
Abacha former Nigerian Military Head of State who died mysteriously
as a result of Cardiac Arrest," Mrs. Abacha had "US $41.5
Million Dollars" which was "sealed in two Metal Boxes
In Nigeria." And nobody but me could help her get them out,
of course.
I
started filing the offers based on creativity and literary merit,
and noticed patterns emerging. A recurring theme involves a late,
lamented mining engineer by the name of "Smith B. Andreas."
"Dear
sir," wrote Mr. Mudy Edger, purportedly of Louis Botha Crescent,
Sadton, South Africa, back on June 26, "In order to transfer
out 126 million United States Dollars from African Development Bank,
I have the courage to ask you to look for a reliable and honest
person who will be capable for this important business. ...
"I
am Mr. Mudy edger, the Chief auditor of African Development Bank."
(Do you suppose he’d mind if I borrowed his name for the protagonist
of an existential detective novel?) "There is an account opened
in this bank in 1980 and since 1990 nobody has operated on this
account again. after going through some old files in the records
I discovered that if I do not remit this money out urgently it will
be forfeited for nothing. the owner of this account is Mr. Smith
B. Andreas, a foreigner and a miner at kruger gold co. and he died
since 1990. no other person knows about this account. ..."
(Do these people really speak English that way, or is it just part
of the act?)
All
I have to do is send "full details of the account to be used
for the deposit," and I’ll end up with one third.
But
my Uncle Smith’s plane crash had mysteriously shifted from 1990
to 1997 by the time I heard from Dr. Koffi Kaku, of the Auditing
and Accounting Unit, Foreign Remittance Department, International
Bank of Africa, Lome-Togo:
"During
our investigation and auditing in this bank, my department came
across a very huge sum of money belonging to a deceased person who
died on November 1997 in a plane crash and the fund has been dormant
in his account ..." $14 million this time.
I
replied:
Dear
Dr. Kaku
Wow!
Upon his demise in the tragic accident in which his Ford Tri-motor
encountered that massive swarm of tsetse flies over Lake Victoria,
my beloved uncle Smith Andreas, noted hydrologist, veterinary researcher,
and palladium magnate, left me ANOTHER bank account this one valued
at U.S. $14 million and this time in Lome-Togo?
I
didn’t know he’d even BEEN to Lome-Togo.
For
that matter, I didn’t even know they’d added the "Lome."
I thought that was some kind of traditional Hawaiian dish. But now,
looking at the map, I see it’s actually the CAPITAL of Togo. Live
and learn!
Thanks
for the news. I’ll be sure to make a stop and claim these funds
in between closing down Uncle Smith’s equally moribund accounts
in Nigeria and South Africa. (I’m amazed and gratified at how helpful
all you African bank officers have been in contacting me about these
misplaced funds.) I fear I will need some help with the international
air fare, however, so please send me a bank "cashier’s"
or "treasurer’s" check for U.S. $1,840 to: Vin Suprynowicz,
c/o Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1111 W. Bonanza Road, Las Vegas, Nev.
89106, U.S.A., to facilitate my travel and further research.
(We’re
planning a memorial sculpture of my Uncle Smith, depicting his final
moments wiping the swarms of flies from the goggles of his leather
flying cap, his white scarf streaming out behind as he plunged into
the crocodile-infested waters. If you like, feel free to add a little
something extra to help fund this endeavor. The full-size Tri-motor
is going to take a lot of bronze. Not to mention the swarm of bronze
tsetse flies. ...)
An
apparently somewhat confused Dr. Kaku wrote back on July 24:
"Dear
Vin Suprynowicz, How are you? Hope good.
"Please
can you put me through because I don’t understand what you are talking
about in your mail send to me. Are you interested in the deal or
not tell me so that I can go ahead and do the deal with you.Or you
can tell me so that I can go ahead and look for bodyelse who can
help me champion this deal. ..."
So
I wrote back again:
Hi,
Koffi It sounds like a WONDERFUL deal! Just send me that bank "cashier’s"
or "treasurer’s" check for U.S. $1,840 and we’ll get started!
This
is a pittance, Koffi, compared to that $14 million we’re going to
split. I’m sure you don’t want to let your share slip through your
fingers, for the lack of a mere $1,840!
Meantime,
feel free to add a little something extra for Uncle Smith’s memorial
sculpture, if you like. We’re arranging to give it a place of honor
on the ceiling of the cocktail lounge of the "Reserve"
casino in Henderson ... or possibly next to Howard Hughes’ old flight
jacket at McCarran International Airport. ...
July
31, 2001
Vin
Suprynowicz [send him mail] is
assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Subscribe to his monthly newsletter by sending $72 to Privacy Alert,
561 Keystone Ave., Suite 684, Reno, NV 89503 or dialing 775-348-8591.
His book, Send
in the Waco Killers: Essays on the Freedom Movement, 1993-1998,
is available at 1-800-244-2224.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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