Mrs Mary White from United Kingdom

Allegedly from: Mrs Mary White.

My Dear Friend,

Let me first of all inform you, I got your email address from a mail Directory and decided to mail you for a permission to go ahead. I am Mrs Mary White from United Kingdom, married to Dr. Harry R. White who worked with Elf Oil Company in Malaysia before he died in a ghastly motor accident on his way to a Board meeting.

My Husband and me were married but without any children. Since his death I decided not to re-marry and presently I am 69 Years old. When my late husband was Alive he deposited the sum of $8.3M. (Eight Million Three Hundred Thousand US Dollars) with a Bank. Presently this money is still with the Bank and the management just contacted me as the beneficiary to come forward to receive the money or rather Issue a letter of authority to somebody to receive it on my behalf.

I am presently in a hospital where I have been undergoing treatment for Cancer of the lungs. I have since lost my ability to talk and my doctors have told me that I have only a few months to live so I think the best thing to do is to use the money for charity purposes. I want a person who is trustworthy that I will make the beneficiary of my late Husband's Fund deposited with the bank so that the person can get the money and utilize 70% of this money to fund churches, orphanages and widows around the world.

As soon as I receive your reply I shall give you the contact details of the Bank. I will also issue you a letter of authority that will prove you as the new beneficiary of this fund. Please assure me that you will act accordingly as I have stated here and Keep this contact confidential until the funds get to your Custody. This is to ensure that nothing jeopardizes my last wish on Earth. I await your urgent reply.

Regards,

Mrs. Mary White

137 people that have visited this site have received this communication.
Have you ever received this communication through email or email forms?

Ignore it! Why you ask?

Requests your personal details

This is a BIG nono. NEVER, NEVER, EVER SEND THEM YOUR INFORMATION.

Email Spoofing

Sometimes you can receive an email from someone and the return address is from a trusted domain name even though the email was not sent by the domain in question. This is called email spoofing.

Impersonates a reputable company

This communication attempts to emulate a reputable company hoping to get you to click on the link or download their attachments.

Ignore it! Ignore it!

If you can't report it, it's best to simply ignore email scams altogether.

Leave a Comment