A letter from Mr. Taylor

RossMAN

Grand Nagus
Feb 24, 2000
78,794
266
116
It's a shame that people fall for scams like this every single day. Especially the elderly who sometimes sink their entire life savings into a scam.

Congratulations, you just won the Novia Scotia, Canada lottery valued at $15,400,000 but first you need to pay $80,000 in taxes/duties/customs in order to claim your winning prize. Sure I'll pay for taxes for a lottery which I never entered in a country where I'm not a legal resident or citizen.

Subject: A LETTER FROM MR.TAYLOR
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 05:19:47 -0500
From: rbttayy@aim.com
To:


Dear Friend,


I am Robert Taylor, a managing director and head of international private banking at Coutts and Co., the private banking arm of Royal bank of Scotland international I am contacting you concerning a deceased customer, and an investment he placed under our banks management 3years ago. I would respectfully request that you keep the contents of this mail confidential and respect the integrity of the information you come by as a result of this mail.

I contact you independently and no one is informed of this communication. I would like to intimate you with certain facts that I believe would be of interest to you. In 2003, the subject matter came to our bank to engage in business discussions with our private banking division. He informed us that he had a financial portfolio of 8.7 million British Pounds Sterling, which he wished to have us turn over (invest) on his behalf. I was the officer assigned to his case, I made numerous suggestions in line with my duties as the de-facto chief operations officer of the private banking sector, especially given the volume of funds he wished to put into our bank.

We met on numerous occasions prior to any investments being placed. I encouraged him to consider various growth funds with prime ratings. The favored route in my advise to customers is to start by assessing data on 6000 traditional stocks and bond managers and 2000 managers of alternative investments. Based on my advice, We spun the money around various opportunities and made attractive margins for our first months of operation, the accrued profit and interest stood at this point at over 6 million British Pounds Sterling, this margin was not the full potential of the fund but he desired low risk guaranteed returns on investments.

In January 2005, he asked that the money be liquidated because he needed to make an urgent investment requiring cash payments. He directed that I liquidate the funds and have it deposited with a security firm.
I informed him that Coutts and Co would have to make special arrangements to have this done and in order not to circumvent due process, the bank would have to make a 9.5 % deduction from the funds to cater for banking and statutory charges. He complained about the charges but later came around when I explained to him the complexities of the task he was asking of us. Large cash movements have become especially strict since the incidents of 9/11. I contacted my affiliate and had the funds available as he had requested. I undertook all the processes and made sure I followed his precise instructions to the letter and had the funds deposited with a security consultancy firm. This security firm is an especially private firm that accepts deposits from high net worth individuals and blue chip corporations that handle valuable products or undertake transactions that need immediate access to cash.
This small and highly private organization is familiar especially to the highly placed and well-connected organizations. In Line with instructions, the money was deposited with them. He told me he wanted the money there in anticipation of his arrival from Norway later that week. This was the last communication we had; this transpired around 25th February 2005.

In October last year, we got a call from the security company informing us of the inactivity of that particular portfolio. This was an astounding position as far as I was concerned, given the fact that I managed the private banking sector I was the only one who knew about the deposit at the security company, and I could not understand why our client had not come forward to claim his deposit. I made futile efforts to locate him.

I immediately passed the task of locating him to the internal investigations department. Four days later, information started to trickle in, apparently our man was dead. A person who suited his description was declared dead of a heart attack in Canne, South of France. We were soon enough able to confirm all of this including cause of death. The bank immediately launched an investigation into possible surviving next of kin to alert about the situation and also to come forward to claim his estate.

If you are familiar with private banking affairs, those who patronize our services usually prefer anonymity, but also some levels of detachment from conventional processes. In his bio-data form, he listed no next of kin. In the field of private banking, opening an account with us means no one will know of its existence, accounts are rarely held under a name; depositors use numbers and codes to make the accounts anonymous.

This bank even gives the choice to depositors of having their mail sent to them or held at the bank itself, ensuring that there are no traces of the account and as I said, rarely do they nominate next of kin. Private banking clients apart from not nominating next of kin also usually in most cases leave wills in our care, in this case; our now deceased client died in testate. In line with our internal processes for account holders who have passed away, we instituted our own investigations in good faith to determine who should have right to claim the estate. This investigation has for the past months been unfruitful. We have scanned every continent and used our private investigation affiliate companies to get to the root of the problem.
It is this investigation that resulted in my being furnished with your details as a possible relative of the deceased. My official capacity dictates that I am the only party to supervise the investigation and the only party to receive the results of the investigation.

It is quite clear now that our dear fellow died with no known or identifiable family members. This leaves me as the only person with the full picture of what the prevailing situation is in relation to the deposit and the late beneficiary of the deposit.According to practice, the security company will by the end of this year broadcast a request for statements of claim to Coutts and Co, failing to receive viable claims they will most probably revert the deposit to Coutts and Co. This will result in the money entering the Coutts and Co Private Bank accounting system and the portfolio will be out of my hands and out of the private banking division. This will not happen if I have my way.

What I wish to relate to you will smack of unethical practice but I want you to understand something. It is only an outsider to the banking world who finds the internal politics of the banking world aberrational. The world of private banking especially is fraught with huge rewards for those who sit upon certain chairs and oversee certain portfolios. You should have begun by now to put together the general direction of what I propose. There is 8,700,000.00 deposited in a security company. I alone have the deposit details and they will release the deposit to no one unless I instruct them to do so.

I alone know of the existence of this deposit for as far as Coutts and Co Private Bank is concerned, the transaction with the late customer concluded when I sent the funds to the security company all outstanding interactions in relation to the file are just customer services and due process. The security company has no single idea of what's the history or nature of the deposit. They are simply awaiting instructions to release the deposit to any party that I may direct. This is the situation.

This bank has spent great amounts of money trying to track this man's family; they have investigated for months and have found no family. The investigation has come to an end. My proposal; I am prepared to instruct the security company to release the deposit to you as the closest surviving relation. Upon receipt of the deposit, I am prepared to share the money with you in half. That is: I will simply nominate you as the next of kin and have them release the deposit to you. We share the proceeds 50/50. You with the same very name as the original depositor would easily pass as the beneficiary with right to claim.

I assure you that I could have the deposit released to you within a few days. I will simply inform the bank of the final closing of the file relating to our late client. I will then officially communicate with the security company and instruct them to release the deposit to you. With these two things: all is done. The alternative would be for us to have the security company direct the funds to another bank with you as account holder. This way there will be no need for you to think of receiving the money directly from the security company as it is not a conventional financial institution; they accept deposits from only organizations thus; what you hand over to them is what you get back. They do not have the means to process the money.

We can fine-tune this based on our interactions. I am aware of the consequences of this proposal. I ask that if you find no interest in this project that you should discard this mail. I ask that you do not be vindictive and destructive. If my offer is of no appeal to you, delete this message and forget I ever contacted you. Do not destroy my career because you do not approve of my proposal. You may not know this but people like myself who have made a tidy sum out of comparable situations run the whole private banking sector.
I am not a criminal and what I do, I do not find against good conscience, this may be hard for you to understand, but the dynamics of my industry dictates that I make this move. Such opportunities only come ones way once in a lifetime. I cannot let this chance pass me by. For once I find myself in total control of my destiny. This chance wont passes me by.
I ask that you do not destroy my chance, if you will not work with me let me know and let me move on with my life but do not destroy me. I am a family man and this is an opportunity to provide them with new opportunities. There is a reward for this project and it is a task well worth undertaking. I have evaluated the risks and the only risk I have here is from you refusing to work with me and alerting my bank.

I am the only one who knows of this situation, good fortune has blessed you with a name that has planted you into the center of relevance in my life. Lets share the blessing. If you find yourself able to work with me, contact me through this email. If you give me positive signals, I will give you the relevant details and initiate this process towards a conclusion.

I wish to inform you that should you contact me via official channels; I will deny knowing you and about this project. I repeat, I do not want you contacting me through my official phone lines nor do I want you contacting me through my official email account. Contact me only through my alternate email account: rbtt.tayy@yahoo.co.uk. I do not want any direct link between you and I. My official lines are not secure lines as they are periodically monitored to assess our level of customer care in line with our total Quality Management Policy. Please observe this instruction religiously.
Please, again, note I am a family man; I have a wife and children. I send you this mail not without a measure of fear as to what the consequences, but I know within me that nothing ventured is nothing gained and that success and riches never come easy or on a platter of gold. This is the one truth I have learned from my private banking clients. Do not betray my confidence. I await your response.


Sincerely,
Robert Taylor.
 

rivan

Diamond Member
Jul 8, 2003
9,677
3
81
You should reply to him:

Dear Mr. Taylor:

Cliffs?

Sincerely,
RossMAN
 

Chiboy

Diamond Member
Jun 4, 2002
3,814
6
81
Originally posted by: rivan
You should reply to him:

Dear Mr. Taylor:

Cliffs?

Sincerely,
RossMAN

Cliffs: Yet another scam.

Edit: LMAO @ "Do not betray my confidence. I await your response."
 

RossMAN

Grand Nagus
Feb 24, 2000
78,794
266
116
Originally posted by: rivan
You should reply to him:

Dear Mr. Taylor:

Cliffs?

Sincerely,
RossMAN

Actually I just replied expressing my interest and asking for pictures of his wife and children. I also made him promise he won't give away the millions of dollars to some other greedy bastard. I want it all to myself!
 

plastick

Golden Member
Sep 29, 2003
1,400
1
81
I got an email just like that a long time ago. I replied with something similar.
 

RossMAN

Grand Nagus
Feb 24, 2000
78,794
266
116
Originally posted by: plastick
I got that email a long while back. I replied with something similar.

Dave!!! Who are you using for hosting right now?
 

plastick

Golden Member
Sep 29, 2003
1,400
1
81
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: plastick
I got that email a long while back. I replied with something similar.

Dave!!! Who are you using for hosting right now?

Well, I was trying to use godaddy but I cant figure out their control panel. I should just give it more time, but I stopped carring. It was free though, so I'm sure it's not that good. So maybe I'll purchase one next time I get the motivation. Are you still pimping for dartsworth?
 

RossMAN

Grand Nagus
Feb 24, 2000
78,794
266
116
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Hopefully he replies, this could be good :D

Hopefully I've piqued their interest by:

1) Expressing my interest.
2) Asking for re-assurance that he isn't trying to scam me.
3) Asking if they accept international wire transfer?
4) Signing it Dr.

Originally posted by: plastick
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: plastick
I got that email a long while back. I replied with something similar.

Dave!!! Who are you using for hosting right now?

Are you still pimping for dartsworth?

It's cPanel and it's free, kinda hard to beat that isn't it?
 

anxi80

Lifer
Jul 7, 2002
12,295
2
0
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Congratulations, you just won the Novia Scotia, Canada lottery valued at $15,400,000 but first you need to pay $80,000 in taxes/duties/customs in order to claim your winning prize. Sure I'll pay for taxes for a lottery which I never entered in a country where I'm not a legal resident or citizen.
thats not too shabby of a deal! $80,000 cad is like what, $7.33 usd? i think the risk versus the rewards for an $8 investment is worth it. :p
 

jhayx7

Platinum Member
Oct 1, 2005
2,226
0
0
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Mr. Taylor hasn't responded :(

I respond to EVERY spam email like this and I have never gotten a response back. Do I suck that bad at life that a spammer won't respond to me?!