ThePoliticalCat

A Blog devoted to progressive politics, environmental issues, LGBT issues, social justice, workers' rights, womens' rights, and, most importantly, Cats.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Consumer Alert: Culling The Herd


Okay, WHAT??? How dumb - or "relationship-challenged" would you have to be to believe something like this?

The WaPoo is reporting that scammers are actually emailing people and purporting to be hired killers who will not kill them &mdash for a fee:
"The sender tells the receiver, 'I've been hired to kill you, it's one of your friends, I'm watching you. However . . . I don't believe you did what they said, and I'm going to give you a chance to pay me, and I won't kill you,' " Fairfax police spokeswoman Camille Neville said.
Yaknow, if someone tried that line on us, our first response would be to try and trace their IP address, ping them, find out what we could and take it to the local villaincatchers. And the FBI.

Plus, we'd want some proof. Okay, you're watching us? What's our address? How many people live in our house. Something like that.

Plus, if someone's trying to rip us off over the internet, aren't they opening themselves to charges of fraud, extortion, and deity only knows what else?

We grew up in the era of Godfather-style gangster movies. We expect to receive messages like the above attached to the dismembered horse's head in our bed. Not in our damn emailbox.

To our great amusement, one recipient had this response:
"You sit there and start racking your brain and thinking, 'Who would want to do it?' " Walker said. "Say that e-mail went to 10,000 people. Five percent of people probably responded to it, if for no other reason than to ask what was going on."
You're kidding us, right? There are people who wouldn't automatically hit delete? Or, better yet, set up spam filters? Hey, this is people's work eaddies we're talking about here! What's IT's policy on spam, anywho?

The article goes on to say:
The Internet Crime Complaint Center, which tracks e-mail scam trends, warned of an increase in such threats in December 2006.

[...]

Web crooks have impersonated FBI agents who have demanded bribes or made threats; claimed to be State Department officials who discovered recipients' inheritances abroad; and called themselves U.S. soldiers in need of help, usually involving banking information.
The State Department wants you to know that it is not about to contact your skeezy ass with information about money that it might have that might belong to you. Hahaha. As if we needed them to tell us that. You'd probably have to beat the entire department about the head and shoulders with various weapons to make them release a single red cent of your money.

So if you, or anyone you know, is a beneficiary of such scams, here's what to do:
[...Do] not reply but instead report them to the Internet Crime Complaint Center, a partnership of the FBI and the National White Collar Crime Center, at http://www.ic3.gov. Any e-mails that contain information such as the recipients' names or locations should be reported to police, authorities said.

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6 Comments:

At 6:12 PM, Blogger deuddersun said...

Well, if they could really see me then they would know that I am a drug and booze addled sociopath former Marine who thinks he's still in the Corps and doesn't go to the bathroom without a .357 with a 6" barrel and magnum hollowpoints and a samurai sword. So I think they'd probably wanna pack a lunch for that bit of work.

d.

 
At 6:27 PM, Blogger ThePoliticalCat said...

Jeebus! What a way to make friends, deuddersun! Let's exchange blood and what-all.

Cool beans, fella. You know how to give spammers painful, I mean, gainful employment.

What kind samurai sword? And whered'ja get it? (I want one too.)

 
At 9:22 AM, Blogger deuddersun said...

Oooookay, the sword can be seen here, just scroll down:

http://deuddersun.blogspot.com/2006/02/finallythe-rock-has-come-back-to.html

The .357 can be seen here, again scroll down past the picture of the pissant:

http://deuddersun.blogspot.com/2004/09/protest-pissants-are-sooooo-bad-ooooo.html


The sword was a gift, however a google search will find plenty of them available. Too bad I don't have a pic of my tomahawks. I throw bladed weapons very well. If it's got a point, I can stick it in something, lol!
Enjoy!

d.

 
At 9:23 AM, Blogger deuddersun said...

You may have to expand your comments in order to get the link. Have fun!

d.

 
At 7:46 PM, Blogger libhom said...

Considering that the local news, the national news media, and the politicians try to keep us all in a perpetual state of fear, I'm not shocked that these spam messages work on some people. They take advantage of the massive brainwashing we are subjected to in our daily lives.

 
At 10:14 PM, Blogger ThePoliticalCat said...

I dunno, libhom. Mi papa y mama taught us to be extremely suspicious of anyone or thing that attempted to liberate us from our wallet. It seems a healthy dose of suspicion and cynicism was the order of the day when men like Ambrose Bierce and Mark Twain still roamed the earth. And Mary "Mother" Jones and Emma Goodman were nobody's fools, either.

 

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