THE E-LOTTERY COMPANY PROMOTION
UK OFFICE.
7, West End Avenue.
Cheshire, U.K
Draw Date: 20-10-2007.
ATTENTION : Winner,
We happily announce to you the E-lottery draw of the Lottery
International programs held in the UK on saturday 20th October
2007.Your e-mail address was attached to these lucky winning numbers
below and your personal datas: Email ticket number; FL754/22/76
Lotto Code Number: FL09622UK
Ref Number: FL/04/736207147/UK
Winning Numbers: 09 ? 13 ? 15 ? 31 ? 48 ? BB 03 ? BB 06.
Consequently, you have therefore been approved for a total pay out of
£1,569,652.00 Pound Sterlings (One Million, Five Hundred and Sixty Nine
Thousand Six Hundred And Fifty Two Pound Sterlings) only.The following
particulars are attached to yourlotto payment order. All participants
for the online version were selected randomly from World Wide Web sites
through computer draw system and extracted from over 100 corporate
bodies that are listed online. To file for your claim, please contact
our fiduciary agent with details of your winnings(Winning Numbers,
Email ticket number,Lotto Code Number and Ref Number).
Mr Stevenpark. Foreign Services Manager, Payment and Release order
Department,CLAIMS PROCESSING LOTTERY AGENT.
7, West End Avenue.Cheshire, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone Number: +447045742800
+447024027538
E-mail : contactagentstevenpark009@yahoo.co.uk
If you do not contact your claims agent within three working days,with
the information given to you.
PAYMENT PROCESSING FORM
(1) FULL NAME:
(2) FULL ADDRESS:
(3) NATIONALITY:
(4) AGE:
(5) OCCUPATION:
(6 )TELEPHONE NUMBER:
(7) SEX:
(8) TOTAL AMOUNT WON:
(9) COUNTRY:
Congratulations once again from all our staff for being a part of our
Promotions program.
Amanda Collins. (Mrs.)
© UK & Europe E-Lottery 2007
Lottery scam quick guide: it's a scam if...
- you win any lottery where you didn't buy a ticket! It's really that easy! It's not just too good to be true: it's bait in a trap!
- you receive a generous grant out of the blue. Sadly (but not surprisingly) there aren't any benevolent people regularly throwing around millions of pounds/dollars/euros to randomly chosen people. This is just the lottery scam without the ticket.
- they send you partial payment in the form of a cheque, money order, or direct bank transfer and want you to pay them fees out of that money. They're playing you for a sucker: cheques are frequently forged, and direct transfers made by compromising some poor schmuck's online banking service. You'll wind up a victim of fraud, or a party to it.
- they want you to send them any money of any sort for any reason. They might try to say there are courier fees or taxes to cover. They're lying. Call their bluff and tell them to take the fees out themselves -- they'll never ever agree, because they can't defraud you unless money is making the reverse trip from you to them somehow.
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