Threatening emails are just that.  More often than not, they have  little 
merit.  Especially when sent from offshore.  For the sender,  they could be 
barely earning pennies for a day's work in front of a provided  computer, 
typing 
from a thatched roof sweat shop, cranking out these kinds of  emails to a list 
of emails that have been provided.  Most anti-phishing and  spam programs 
delete these emails before they actually get to you.
 
I merely delete those that remain......
Best Wishes
 
In a message dated 1/24/2008 11:17:14 A.M. Central Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

i 'played along' with one  of these a few years ago, to the point where i 
told the person i would indeed  deposit her money order in my account and then 
send her back 80% of that money  by wire.   soon she was sending threatening 
emails demanding her  money because she sent me a money order - (she never sent 
one).  i was  wondering when i might see a big thug bang on my door demanding 
money.   thankfully i had used my business address and none of my personal info 
-  still, one wonders how good they are at locating ip addresses or  
whatever.  i guess the bogus money orders are pretty hard to detect and  take a 
long 
time to return as fakes.  best to just ignore these 'too good  to be true' 
opportunities for the cheaters they are.
Dave from AZ  






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