Web
of deceit
Who's
sending you all those scam Nigerian e-mails?
- Perhaps
you heard from Daniel A. Oluwa over the past few days. He's a member
of Nigeria's Federal Audit Committee. He dropped you an e-mail, labeled
"Strictly Confidential," stating that he's discovered a frozen
account containing $42.5 million. Mr. Oluwa wants to snag the loot,
but, for unfathomable reasons, he needs a foreign-based partner to act
as an intermediary. Interested? Merely send along your "bank name,
address, account number, swift code, ABA number (if any), beneficiary
of account, telephone and fax numbers of bank." Thirty percent
of the booty shall eventually be yours.
IF YOU
DIDN'T RECEIVE Oluwa's electronic plea, maybe you were instead pitched
by Dr. Chukwubu Eze, who's looking for a partner to help him spirit
away $33.62 million in illicit oil money. Or Steve Okon, the purported
son of a murdered Zimbabwean diplomat. He's got the skinny on about
$10 million stashed away in an Amsterdam vault. Or any number of women
named Mariam who claim to be the widows of either the late Nigerian
strongman Sani Abacha or the deceased Zairian dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.
They need help tapping into some Swiss bank accounts.
THE 419
FRAUD
As you no doubt guessed, none of these supplicants were on the up-and-up.
But you might be surprised to learn that they are, in fact, Nigerian.
Odds are they're all Lagos-based con artists looking for American dupes
greedy enough and dumb enough to spend thousands in pursuit of nonexistent
fortunes. They aim to lure you to Nigeria or to a nearby nation where
you'll be cajoled into ponying up endless fees to secure the "riches"
- $30,000 for a "chemical solvent" to disguise the money or
$50,000 for "customs duties." When you eventually wise up,
faux police barge into your hotel and demand massive bribes in exchange
for your freedom. Tapped out? Expect to be held for ransom or murdered.
This swindle
is commonly known as "419 fraud," after the section of the
Nigerian penal code covering cons. According to the anti-spam software
vendor Brightmail, 419 come-ons are the Web's second-most common form
of junk mail, ranking behind only those incessant "herbal Viagra"
ads. Though most people merely laugh at the pleas' awful grammar and
all-caps style ("I WILL LIKE YOU CONTACT MY LAWYER ..."),
about 1 percent of recipients actually respond. Of that number, enough
people fork over enough cash to sustain an industry that ranks in Nigeria's
top five, right up there with palm oil and tin. The U.S. Secret Service
has estimated - conservatively, by its own admission - that the scammers
net $100 million per year.
ROOTS OF
A SCAM
The scam is experiencing a digitally aided heyday, but 419's roots stretch
back to the Jazz Age. It's an Africanized version of "The Spanish
Prisoner," a classic 1920s scheme in which suckers were convinced
that a wealthy scion was rotting in a Barcelona jail. Front some cash
to win his freedom, and you'd be amply rewarded for your troubles. Or
not.
Nigerian
updates on the Spanish Prisoner first appeared in the late 1970s, when
photocopied pleas began arriving in American mailboxes. Organized gangs
located potential victims by combing through the White Pages, and they
paid for the postage with bogus stamps. The volume of letters picked
up in the mid-1980s, when Nigeria's oil industry tanked. The widespread
adoption of the fax machine gave the hucksters an additional means of
contacting their prey, and corporate faxes churned out plenty of junk
letters beginning, "PLEASE EXCUSE MY INTRUSION INTO YOU BUSINESS
LIFE.
"
The scam's transition to e-mail began around 1996. At first, because
of Nigeria's lackluster telecommunications infrastructure - household
phones are a rarity, to say nothing of dial-up Internet access - only
the old organized gangs could afford to participate. But in the past
two to three years, cybercafes have sprung up all over Lagos and other
major Nigerian cities.
THE INTERNET
AGE
Information
technology has lowered the barriers to entry for Nigerians hoping for
a share of the 419 haul, just as it's helped countless Americans indulge
their fantasies of becoming self-taught electronic musicians, video
auteurs, or MP3 swappers. Brains, not money, is the scam's only prerequisite
now, thanks to the Internet's inherently democratic nature. Unfortunately
for the gullible of the world, Lagos teems with bright, underemployed
youths who grasp that concept. No longer the sole domain of professional
criminals, 419 has become a cozy family business, Nigeria's version
of the Greek diner or Irish pub.
For $1
per hour, a lone 419er can use a cybercafe terminal to send out duplicitous
spam, eliminating the need for sizeable startup capital (even fake postage
stamps cost something). Spam "bots," or automated programs,
comb the Internet in search of e-mail addresses, replacing the need
to spend hours upon hours thumbing through American or European phone
books. E-mail accounts can be obtained for free via services like Hotmail
or Yahoo!, and they're untraceable when registered with false information
and used from a public terminal. Some 419ers with rudimentary HTML skills
have even begun to set up fake Web pages to bolster their scams. A site
for the fictitious "Dominion of Melchizedek" recently bilked
thousands of Filipinos in a bogus-passport con.
Not surprisingly,
the number of 419 letters received by Americans has soared. The Secret
Service reported a 900 percent increase in the volume of Nigerian scam
spam between 2000 and 2001. The U.S. government is so rankled by 419
spam that it's given the Nigerian government an ultimatum: Do something
about the problem by November or face economic sanctions. Although last
year only 16 Americans claimed financial losses, totaling $345,000,
that's probably a fraction of the full amount. Most victims are too
embarrassed by their own stupidity to ever come forward.
GETTING
WIRED
Heartless
as it may sound, there's a silver lining to the digitization of 419.
The proliferation of cybercafes in Nigeria can be linked directly to
the demand supplied by 419ers, who form the establishments' core clientele.
Walk into an Internet cafe in Lagos, and chances are that a good percentage
of the terminals are occupied by men masquerading as Laurent Kabila's
long-lost son or as a rogue official at the Central Bank of Nigeria.
The wiring of Nigeria is being propelled by 419 - much as America's
appetite for porn helped shepherd the commercial Internet through its
infancy. AOL made it through its lean, early years only because of adult
chat rooms and spicy picture downloads (which kept the meter running
during the era of per-hour access fees).
Someday
419 will abate, when young, educated Nigerians have better economic
prospects and foreign Internet users get it through their thick skulls
that, no, you're not going to rake in millions by flying to Nigeria
and fronting some stranger your life savings. And when that day comes,
there will be a thriving Internet culture for Nigerians to use for more
legitimate purposes. If the Daniel A. Oluwas of the world have the technical
chops to work a 419 scam, they can surely get an e-commerce site going.