There are several ways of identifying a fake
lottery email: • Unless someone has bought a ticket, one cannot have won a prize. There are no such things as "email" draws or any other lottery where "no tickets were sold". This is simply another invention by the scammer to make the victims believe that they have won. • The scammer will ask the victims to pay a fee in advance to receive their prize. All genuine lotteries simply subtract any fees and tax from the prize. Regardless of what the scammer claims this fee is for (such as courier charges,
bank charges, or various imaginary certificates), these are all fabricated by the scammer to obtain money from victims. • Scam lottery emails will often come from free email accounts such as
Outlook,
Yahoo!,
Hotmail,
Live,
MSN,
Gmail etc. • Scam emails will often insist that the recipient keep their win confidential; this is done to avoid others advising them that the email is a scam. • There may be inconsistencies between currencies and countries, such as for example the message being sent to an individual who lives in the
UK and claiming the amount won to be in
US dollars and the lottery itself to be based in
South Africa. • As with many scam email messages in general, lottery scam messages may contain spelling and/or grammatical issues. Most email lottery scams are a type of advance fee fraud. ==Mis-selling by lottery "win"==