Mack Brand in Nigeria

Africa Cup of Nations, Qualification National Games of Nigeria. First League Nigeria. Nationwide League. Division 1 Nigeria Championship. National League. Division 3 Live soccer matches on Azscore livescore cover over 500 soccer leagues, cups and tournaments around the world with updated results, statistics, league tables, video messages, events and live broadcasts. Live matches from all soccer leagues have fast and accurate updates of minutes, match results, halftime and full match soccer results, counters and assistants, maps, substitutions, match statistics and live coverage. © 2001-2021 azscore.com - All rights reserved In the Championship of Nigeria. The first division is attended by 0 teams from Nigeria. Nigeria Championship. First Division (Nigeria) game results. Match schedule, standings and important information. Results Nigeria Championship. First division in real time, only on azscore.com. Recently, a virtual friend of mine from a small Siberian town complained in an Internet diary that her mother had become a victim of scammers and donated family savin Mack Brand in Nigeria gs for a nonexistent inheritance from distant Africa. A friend of mine gave her elderly parents a computer, but it did them a disservice. A letter came to their email address, in which an employee of a certain bank in bad English reported amazing news: Anna Sergeeva, the mother of my acquaintance (names and surnames have been changed at the request of a friend), should receive a millionth inheritance. The fact is that their relative, millionaire John Sergeev, died in Africa. Mr. Sergeev did not leave heirs, but his lawyer began to search through the Internet for his client's relatives and after a long search found them in a small Siberian town. As a result of a short correspondence, the "heiress" was offered to pay the "overhead costs" and expect the transfer of the inheritance to the account. My friend's mother transferred several thousand dollars to the account indicated in the letter through the local branch of Sberbank. After that, no one answered either e-mails or calls to the numbers indicated in the letters. Alas, Anna Sergeeva has become another victim of the so-called "Nigerian swindlers". Their scheme is simple: fraudsters send letters in which, as a rule, they ask for help in cashing out a solid amount of several million dollars or offer the addressee to divide other people's money by chance or receive a solid inheritance. For a successful operation, an intermediary or heir requires insignificant (in comparison with future profits) money. Attackers are ready to provide their potential victim with scanned documents, enlist the word of a lawyer or, at worst, a venerable pastor who will confirm the veracity of the story told in the letter. Whatever story was presented by the "Nigerians", it will have one end: having received money from you, the scammers will disappear. Every month, Kaspersky Lab filters catch tens of thousands of Nigerian letters in different languages. This type of fraud is reported both on the Internet and in the print press. But there are always people who have either started using the World Wide Web recently, or have ignored good advice ("why do we need it? You can't fool us anyway!"), Or are simply naive enough and ready to take the promises of scammers seriously. https://jiji.ng/brand/mack

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