Sunday, June 6, 2010

Inbox - Without comment "Greetings to you. My name is Olesya" A Boris letter?

Greetings to you.

My name is Olesya,

I have not contacted you before.

But I would like to get to know you, and maybe develop friendly contacts in future and possibly a litle more than that, time will tell.

I am looking for my other half, and my friends consider me to be very friendly and beautiful.

I am a teacher of English in an Elementary school and I like my work because I love children.

If you like my photo, and the information about me I wrote in this small E-mail,

I would welcome a reply by return E-mail.

Please reply only to my personal e-mail: olesyakhu900@yahoo.com

In the next letter I will send to you more photo that you can see better me. Also I will be grateful, if with your answer will send a photo.

Yours faithfully, Olesya


It is common for the photos to be stolen - My apologies to the lady if this is the case and I invite you to leave a comment below if you did not send this letter and someone has stolen if from a social network site

This type
of letter is also exposed here
http://www.spamhaus.org/Rokso/evidence.lasso?rokso_id=ROK7235


also on wikipedia.org/wiki

A recent variant is the Romance Scam, which is a money-for-romance angle. The con artist approaches the victim on an online dating service, an Instant messenger (like Yahoo IM), or a social networking site. The scammer claims an interest in the victim, and posts pictures posted of an attractive person (not themselves). The scammer uses this communication to gain confidence, then asks for money. The con artist may claim to be interested in meeting the victim, but needs cash to book a plane, hotel room, or other expenses. In other cases, they claim they're trapped in a foreign country and need assistance to return, to escape imprisonment by corrupt local officials, to pay for medical expenses due to an illness contracted abroad, and so on. The scammer may also use the confidence gained by the romance angle to introduce some variant of the original Nigerian Letter scheme, such as saying they need to get money or valuables out of the country and offer to share the wealth, making the request for help in leaving the country even more attractive to the victim. In a newer version of the scam, the con artist claims to have 'information' about the fidelity of a person's significant other, which they will share for a fee. This information is garnered through social networking sites by using search parameters such as 'In a relationship' or 'Married'. Anonymous e-mails are first sent to attempt to verify receipt, then a new web based e-mail account is sent along with directions on how to retrieve the information.


For the dectectives that would like to trace this crook if Bots have not been used
the information

Return-Path:
Received: from d135067.adsl.hansenet.de (d135067.adsl.hansenet.de [80.171.135.67])
by mailer.ran.es (8.14.2/8.13.8) with ESMTP id o56FGPDZ010131
for ; Sun, 6 Jun 2010 17:16:28 +0200
Received: from 80.171.135.67 by mail-relay.msln.net; Sun, 6 Jun 2010 17:16:23 +0100
From: "Isabel Trujillo"
To:
Subject: I have not contacted you before
Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2010 17:16:23 +0100
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
boundary="----=_NextPart_000_000E_01CB058B.394CAB30"
X-Mailer: Microsoft Office Outlook, Build 11.0.6353
Thread-Index: Aca6QZ4YQMAFA47DRMOD5DK6IAD0AX==
X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2800.1106
Message-ID: <000d01cb058b$394cab30$6400a8c0@atwoodc>
X-UIDL: P@"#!j8d"!3n2!!/~i"!
X-EsetId: E74D982990713469F84B987D992670

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