E-mail address computer ballot lottery and it is Legitimate!!!!

ComplaintsScamsCoca Cola Bottling Company Inc.

Complaint

0
Helen
Country: United States
Need to know ASAP - Recd. E-mail from Faye C. Gage (fgage@stagweb.fairfield.edu) stating that I have won a cash prize of $500,000 in computer ballot lottery by Coca Cola Bottling Company Inc. To claim prize it says to contact Mr. Snord Sidwell (sidwellclaims1@gmail.com) and complete short application form.
I note that other people have also received this E-mail and wondered if it were legitimate!!!!
Please let me know ASAP.
Thank you!

Comments

  • 0
    Nasseriam
    | 1 reply
    My Email is :nasserianmohammad@yahoo.com
    do I winning to E-mail address computer ballot lottery?
     Email Coca Cola ?
    • 0
      aubrey replies to Nasseriam
      hi. I also received a winning notification that I won $500,000 from a computer e-mail lottery draw. I want to know from you if you really had claimed the said winnings before I give the  information they were asking. Thanks.
  • 0
    belle
    hi helen,
    me too received the same email but before you believe the message check with the internet the promo company used or the email of the sender for you to know whether its legitimate or not. . .
  • 0
    berto
    i received an e-mail 2!!!! I wondered if it were legitimate!!!!
  • 0
    mikebravo
    i received an e-mail 2!!! is this a scam or what???
  • 0
    Abdul Wahab
    My e-mail address is abdulwahabdx@yahoo.com. Wanted to know about that I received message that I had won coca cola lotto ($500,000 USD) of 2013. Is it fake or not?
  • 0
    ahmed
    hi her i m me also get mail told me that i m winner 500,000$ if it trow please contact me in my e mail ama_eg@yahoo.com  phone no +201225331237 i m from EGYPT THANK U .
  • 0
    abdulrahman usman
    I received an E-mail from coca-cola lotto that i have won ($500,000USD), i don't know how it is. you can please contact me through my E-mail (uabdulrahman56@yahoo.com) or phone no- +2348137538236. thanks from Nigeria
  • 0
    Tidja Allama
    I received also E-mail from coca-cola lotto that i have won ($500,000USD), pls. contact contact me in my E-mail t.allama@yahoo.com or cellphone no. 09398366133
  • 0
    afzal hussain
    I received also E-mail from coca-cola lotere i have won ($500,000USD) my E-mail is  a_afzal14@yahoo.com .my cellphone no 009660595225008.. saudi arab
  • 0
    equinio sumauang
    | 1 reply
    I also received a winning notification that I won $500,000 from a computer e-mail lottery draw.my email. add. equiniosumauang at rocketmail.com
    • 0
      aka khil hamid replies to equinio sumauang
      I am also being informed about winning USD 500,000 and is asked to keep it secret by sidwell.
  • 0
    lhyn
    I also got the same notification. Is it a scam?????
  • 0
    serwaa ruth
    hello i  have received  a  mail  that my  email have  won a lottery   from  coca cola promotions and i was  asked to    make  my claims   through you wanted to  know that the  lottery is real  and then also  i  can make the preparations for my claims  my email is sruth73@yahoo.com
  • 0
    richard onyango
    ello i  have received  a  mail  that my  email have  won a lottery   from  coca cola promotions and i was  asked to    make  my claims   through you wanted to  know that the  lottery is real  and then also  i  can make the preparations for my claims  my email is raonyango@yahoo.co.uk.I filled and sent the form as instructed
  • 0
    cc
    hi her i m me also get mail told me that i m winner 500,000$ if it trow please contact me in my e mail   sh_uk@yahoo
  • 0
    abdelmonim
    I have  received the same thing !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • 0
    abdel
    The so-called "419" scam (aka "Nigeria scam" or "West African" scam) is a type of fraud named after an article of the Nigerian penal code under which it is prosecuted. It is also known as "Advance Fee Fraud" because the common principle of all the scam format is to get the victim to send cash (or other items of value) upfront by promising them a large amount of money that they would receive later if they cooperate. In almost all cases, the criminals receive money using Western Union and MoneyGram, instant wire transfer services with which the recipient can't be traced once the money has been picked up. These services should never be used with people you only know by email or telephone!

    Typically, victims of the scam are promised a lottery win (example) or a large sum of money sitting in a bank account or in a deposit box at a security company. Often the storyline involves a family member of a former member of government of an African country, a ministerial official, an orphan or widow of a rich businessman, etc. Here is an example. Variants of the plot involving the Philippines, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Korea, Iraq, Kuwait, UAE, Mauritius, etc. are also known. Some emails include pictures of boxes stuffed with dollar bills, scans of fake passports, bank or government documents and pictures of supposedly the sender.

    Though most of these scams use emails sent in English, we also come across emails translated into French, German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Polish and Czech, Indonesian, as well as English and French letters by postal mail, usually mailed from Spain.

    Back in the 1980s and 1990s (for this is nothing new!) the main vehicle for this scam were fax machines.

    The victims are promised a fortune for providing a bank account to transfer the money to. Then - if they fall for the scam - they are made to part with thousands and sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars in "bribes" for local officials or other "fees" (taxes, insurance, legal fees, etc) before the "partners" finally disappear without trace. Here are some typical examples of advance fee demands.

    Sometimes fraudulent cashier's checks are issued to the victims, who are asked to wire funds for various charges after the bank says funds are "available" from the check, but before the check has actually cleared. Any transaction that involves cashing a check for a third party and then forwarding funds from it to another person you don't know is almost guaranteed to be a scam.
  • 0
    Alia khan
    Hy me also receive a meesange of winning prize of 5hundred thousand dpllars is it true ? Plz answer me
  • 0
    Alia khan
    My email is k.alia21@yahoo.com

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