Mail order brides scam, international marriage scam, Russian women scam - let's fight it!

main page
Scammers search scammers list gold diggers full database browse by name new scammers celebrities photos report a scam
For members login register membership lucky membership
Information about campaign scam scenarios warning signs
Agencies agency check-list join our program you recommend
Contacts guestbook testimonials contact us
Quick registration:

Scammer report

read more information about Scammer after registration
anti scam women scam

Total photos: 12

View big photos

Prev123 4 567Next

Add/read comments
(total: 7)

# Name:      Anastasiya Kudryavtseva

# E-mail:     beau2y_wow@yahoo.com

# Address:  Russia , Kazan

# Seen at:   I do not remember.

# Dangerous: 17%

# Related reports: 2899   

# Scam scenarios:   money for VISA and travel

# Details: Sends pre-written modified letters and asks for money for visa, passport and travel money to come to meet you.



# Date: 2007-09-08

Two months of letters were exchanged and I did a test. She said she loved me but made a mistake by asking me in her last letter if my family in Poland would speak a little Russian when we went to visit them. I don’t have family in Poland and she knew this, so I knew she was writing to someone else and screwed up when she did her letter edit. In this letter she described going to Western Union to pick up the money I was sending, but I never made any plans to send her any money. I then created a new e-mail account and sent her a new letter as Maxwell from Colorado, a lawyer, and got a picture of a handsome stud looking guy by a pool and sent her a letter, the day after she said she loved me and made a mistake in her letter. She took the bait and responded to Max with her first letter, the same as the first letter she wrote me. My lesson from this one is that any time someone sends out a picture that is numbered with every new letter, it is a scammer!!! They will modify pre-written letters and they will spend months to do what they do. She did a lot of work to try to fool me by tailoring each new letter with a response from my last letter. She even called me three times. Yes, I gave her my number but she of course did not have a phone for me to call her on. There is another lie that I caught her on. She said she was calling from the postal exchange. They are not open on Sunday. She was calling me from a cell phone, and not the postal exchange. Do not send money to a pretty picture. I wish I could find out who her victim was that was sending her money.