Sad pictures, pathetic stories, hard fates: fraudsters and scammers have no means of being too irreverent to get attention with their scams. Brand new and readable many times over: the terminally ill and extremely rich Ilse!


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With status posts like these, fraudsters are putting a lot of pressure on people's pity, but at the same time arousing people's greed with their content:

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The content of this status message is in barrier-free plain text:

Donate my money. I am PCHOWETZ ILSE I am sick, I suffer from a serious illness, I have a brain tumor, I am sentenced to death and I have assets of 1,256,000 euros and I would like a donation to be a trustworthy and honest person so that it goes well should use. I am the owner of a company importing wood in France and I lost my husband of 6 years which affected me very much and I have not been able to get married so far, we had no children. I would like to donate this amount before my death since my days are numbered because this disease to what I have become a cure but a soothing one in France, finally I would like to know if anyone is interested in this gift. Here is my email address: pchowet[…]gmail.com

Poor Ilse Pchowetz's blatant religious story is even more blatant... and more disrespectful: there is the same status report with a picture! Apparently this is Ilse:

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Particularly bold and disgusting!

The woman pictured on the right is Chantal Sébire, who died in 2008 and suffered from esthesioneuroblastoma, an extremely rare tumor disease. Sébire became known because she publicly advocated being allowed to receive euthanasia and tried to sue for this in court. [ 1 ]

It is now even more disrespectful when fraudsters use their pictures to scam people.

Scam – what is it?

Watchlist-Internet writes about this type of fraud :

The pattern of this type of crime is always the same: an unknown religious person from a poor region of the world, judging by the content of the emails, is said to have a large sum of millions of dollars . It is associated with death, war or personal strokes of fate . The recipient of the letter should help to donate or inherit the money . To do this, you must first respond to the letter. The Watchlist Internet found out what the answer was in a self-test. The reaction is likely to be the same for comparable fraud attempts.

The goal of fraudsters is always to establish contact. In a lively correspondence over a longer period of time, a certain level of trust is formed: the “victim” increasingly gets the feeling that the fraudster's story is real. Before the alleged payout is made, the victim always has to pay some kind of advance. Alleged bank fees, customs fees, taxes, etc. With the variant described here, you can easily imagine that the victim would end up having to pay some kind of inheritance taxes before the amount is handed over.

If the victims have paid the amount of money in advance, contact is lost. The fraudsters' goal has been achieved; the promised money never existed anyway.

Notes:
1) This content reflects the current state of affairs at the time of publication. The reproduction of individual images, screenshots, embeds or video sequences serves to discuss the topic. 2) Individual contributions were created through the use of machine assistance and were carefully checked by the Mimikama editorial team before publication. ( Reason )