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Michigan treasurer falls for Nigerian 419 scam

Mucho

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Bilks' $1.9m
By Dan Goodin in San Francisco ? More by this author
Published Thursday 25th January 2007 19:42 GMT
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A public treasurer in the Michigan county of Alcona stands accused of embezzling tax payers out of more than $1.2m, at least part of which was used to cover costs he incurred falling for a Nigerian banking fraud.

Thomas Katona, the former Treasurer of Alcona County, was charged with nine felonies. According to the Michigan Attorney General's office, the 56-year-old beancounter, who held his post for 13 years, also plowed $72,000 of his own money into the fraud.
County officials first suspected something was amiss late last year, when bank employees informed them Katona had sent eight payments totaling $186,500 to overseas accounts, six of which were associated with peddlers of the Nigerian scheme. He stepped down in November as authorities commenced an investigation.

They found that bank employees had warned Katona that the investment was a sham, but the treasurer ignored the warnings. An audit eventually showed that more than $1.2m was missing from county coffers. It remains unclear how much of that was paid to the scammers.

Last week a judge set Katona's bail about $1m. The sad tale reminds us of the adage, incorrectly attributed to P.T. Barnum, that there's a sucker born every minute. While the common perception is that only trailer-dwelling louts fall for the get-rich-while-you-lose-weight-in-your-sleep scams, history shows otherwise.

Other victims of the 419 scheme who should have known better are said to include a Harvard professor and Ronald Reagan's neuroscientist. ®

Text

So these scams do work from time to time.
 
Originally posted by: iamwiz82
Just wait, in 5 years, you're going to be blown away!

Sheesh, my wallet was blown away the first year she took office!

I don't think I can stand being "blown away" again!

:shocked:
 
It amazes me how people can be told flat out it's a scam and then send away thousands of their own money anyway. If you needed money that badly I don't know how you could think wiring so much away is a good idea.
 
i hear people have written computer programs that automatically string phishers along. would be interesting for ISPs to implement this on a wide scale
 
Originally posted by: yowolabi
It amazes me how people can be told flat out it's a scam and then send away thousands of their own money anyway. If you needed money that badly I don't know how you could think wiring so much away is a good idea.

yeh holy crap. Why did he just not take the money he sent to the scammers and goto Mexico instead with the dough. He would be sipping margaritas now instead of being someone's bitch in prison.
 
Reading that reminded me of Office Space:

We get caught laundering money, we're not going to white-collar resort prison. No, no, no. We're going to federal POUND ME IN THE A S S prison.
 
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