Bad grammar and incorrect spelling clearly are warning signs.
#Sgt monica lin brown e mail how to
You can tell, almost immediately, assuming you know how to read and write yourself, that the information is corrupted. I personally love the spelling in most of these scam emails. You can securely help out and probably get a tax receipt. If you want to help out soldiers of any country, donate to the official Department of Veterans’ Affairs. Either there is a virus attached or they are attempting to part you from your money.
Answer such emails or friend requests at your own peril. But Google also demonstrated to me that Facebook is awash with scammers flooding us regular folks with posts that boil down to offering to “share” millions of money! The texts may vary but the gist is all the same and this email from Sgt. So this person was surely a good “friend” candidate. She was presented with the medal by then Vice President Dick Cheney, luckily not while out hunting with him! Brown is only the 2nd woman since World War II (and the 1st in the war on Afghanistan) to receive the Silver Star for her actions and bravery after a roadside bomb detonated near her convoy. Who the heck is Monica Lin Brown? Well, being the sceptic I am, and cautious (again influences from those crime shows I love to watch), I googled the name. Monica Lin Brown, stating that she saw my profile on Facebook and wanted to be “friends”.
Delete.Īnd recently, I also received an email from, allegedly, Sgt. As if I would consider the undisclosed proposal to be discussed. Just recently I received an e-mail whose subject matter stated, “Assalamualaykum” (Arabic greeting for “the peace be upon you”). And then there are the Asian, African and Arabic e-mails. How do some people do this? How can they? What thought process leads people to think this is how to earn a living? How can they live with themselves? I will always remain incredulous about such scams even though I hold no lofty visions of homosapiens. The group apparently moved unidentified corpses into fake graves and charged the families a finder’s fee for locating their dear departed using - wait for it - paranormal powers! Gazette, October 17, 2015Īfter 911, a plethora of scam artists targeted those wishing to lend a hand to victims and their families, asking for monetary contributions by passing as fake charities. Laughing sadly, I read those snippets in the paper, those tiny news stories that describe scams that no regular person could begin to dream up, let alone execute, but yet some element of bottom feeders have managed to conjure up scenarios to bilk certain groups in the population.įor example, in Vietnam, seven fraudsters were convicted for deceiving families of war soldiers by creating a business of finding their dead loved ones. Never do I cease to be amazed by the sheer audacity of the human race in its creativity for frauding the gullible public. (I am a human being: I regard nothing of human concern as foreign to my interests) “Homo sum, humani nihil a me alienum puto” How low can they go in in their creativity for scamming the gullible public?