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UK National Lottery Scams: Verifications Dept. at the headquarters of The UK National Lottery, Lorraine Dodds, Mr. Charles Edward

UK National Lottery Scams:
Example:
UK National Lottery
"Lorraine Dodds", "Mr. Charles Edward"

Have you received an email from "Lorraine Dodds"  at the "UK National Lottery" telling you that you won the a prize and to contact "Mr. Charles Edward"?  It is a scam. A pretty sad one, too.  The scammer was to lazy to even bother to tell you how you won, or how much. 

There are only two legal large lotteries in Britain, the National Lottery and the Monday Lottery, anyway, and they do NOT use email to notify winners. Below is a scam email actually received.

DO NOT reply to any emails you receive that claim you have won a lottery that you did not enter.  They are frauds.  You will lose your money.  There is no "free lunch"; don't be foolish and believe a scam!  We can not say it any more plainly:  YOU WILL NOT BE NOTIFIED BY EMAIL BY ANY LEGITIMATE LOTTERY THAT YOU WON A PRIZE.  If you do receive such an email, it IS a fraud, do not reply to it!  If you DID reply to one, see this page to find out what happens next!

Other resources:

Also

In the UK, call the hotline at 020 7211 8111 to check or report lottery scams.


There are many other signs that this is a fraud that we have highlighted in the email below, typically including one or more of these:

  • Email address ballot: There is no such thing as a "computer ballot system" or "computer email draw". No one, not even Microsoft has a database of email addresses of the type or magnitude they suggest.

  • Terrible spelling, punctuation, syntax and grammar - Scammers apparently don't know how to use spell checkers.  We assume they dropped out of school before that class. They use almost random CapItaLiZAtion and often can't even spell "February" or know that "22th" ought to be "22nd". Real lotteries proofread their emails and use people who can write above the 3rd grade level.

  • Using free email account: The scammer is writing to you from a FREE email account (Yahoo, Hotmail, Excite, AIM, Gmail, etc.).  Don't you think a real organization would use its own email, its own domain and website?

  • Keep Confidential - Real lotteries THRIVE on publicity - they don't want you to keep anything secret - the publicity causes people to buy more tickets. there is NO risk of "double claiming" because they can validate where the ticket numbers were sold. The scammer want you to keep quiet because they don't want the police or ConsumerFraudreporting to hear about them!

  • Email notification: NO REAL LOTTERY SENDS AN EMAIL TO NOTIFY WINNERS.  Period.  Full-stop. End of story. There mere fact ALONE that you received an email saying you won a lottery is proof that it is a scam.

Here is a typical scam lottery winning notification. 


Actual scam email (One example - the scammers constantly change names, dates and addresses!):

From : < quinte@planet.nl >
Reply-To : quinte@planet.nl
Sent : 13 March 2007 12:42:32
Subject : Ref: UK/9420X2/68

Dear Winner,

We happily announce to you the result of Free Ticket draw (#1144) of the UK National Lottery On line Sweepstakes Program held in Newcastle, United-Kingdom. You have therefore been approved to claim a total sum of £850,000.00GBP in cash, credited to file ktu/9023118308/03. To claim your prize, please write to the UK National Lottery Claims Agent with the email as stated below. CONGRATULATIONS!!!

Mr. Charles Edward

E-mail: charleseddy01487@yahoo.co.uk 

Tel: +44 701 113 5632

Yours faithfully,

Lorraine Dodds


Names of Scam / Fake / Fraud Lottery 

Click here for the huge list of the names of the currently identified lottery scams companies

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