419 Nigerian Prince Scam: How Advance Fee Fraud Works
The 419 scam, also known as the Nigerian Prince scam or advance fee fraud, is named after Section 419 of the Nigerian Criminal Code. This scam emerged in the 1980s via postal mail and fax, evolving into one of the internet's most persistent frauds. Scammers contact victims claiming to be foreign officials, businesspeople, or royalty with access to large sums of money they cannot access without help. They promise victims millions of dollars in exchange for assistance, requiring progressively larger upfront payments for taxes, legal fees, or bribes. Despite its notorious reputation, the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center reported losses exceeding $700 million from advance fee schemes in 2022 alone. The scam persists because fraudsters cast extremely wide nets—sending millions of emails globally—and only need a tiny success rate to profit substantially. Modern variations extend beyond Nigerian princes to include lottery winnings, inheritance claims, romantic interests with business problems, and COVID-19 relief fund disbursements. The psychological manipulation is sophisticated: scammers create elaborate documentation including fake government letterheads, legal contracts, and bank statements. Once victims pay the first fee, scammers introduce unexpected complications requiring additional payments, exploiting the sunk cost fallacy. Victims often continue paying, believing they've invested too much to quit, with some losing their life savings over months of escalating requests. The average loss per victim is approximately $5,000, though some cases exceed $100,000.
Common Tactics
- • Scammers send mass emails or social media messages claiming to be foreign government officials, lawyers, or bank employees with access to millions in frozen assets, inherited funds, or over-invoiced contracts that need a foreign partner to claim.
- • They create urgency by claiming the opportunity is time-sensitive due to political instability, legal deadlines, or competing claimants, pressuring victims to act quickly without proper verification.
- • Fraudsters provide official-looking documents including government seals, bank letterheads, photographs of diplomatic credentials, and even fake websites mimicking legitimate institutions to establish credibility.
- • After initial contact, scammers request progressively larger payments labeled as processing fees, legal charges, taxes, customs duties, or anti-terrorism certificates, always promising the large payout is just one payment away.
- • They may use accomplices to pose as lawyers, bank officials, or government ministers who contact the victim independently to verify the legitimacy of the deal, creating an elaborate false reality.
- • When victims hesitate or run out of money, scammers employ emotional manipulation—expressing disappointment, claiming personal hardship, or suggesting the victim will be liable for costs already incurred—to extract final payments.
How to Identify
- Unsolicited contact from strangers offering to share millions of dollars, especially if they claim to be foreign royalty, government officials, or executors of estates for people you've never heard of.
- Requests for upfront payments of any kind before you receive money, particularly when labeled as taxes, processing fees, legal costs, or bribes that must be paid to release larger funds.
- Poor grammar and spelling in supposedly official correspondence, along with email addresses from free services like Gmail or Yahoo rather than official government or corporate domains.
- Reluctance to meet in person or via video call, with excuses about being in remote locations, having security concerns, or communication restrictions due to their official position.
- Pressure to keep the transaction confidential from family, friends, banks, or authorities, often justified by claiming the deal involves sensitive government matters or tax avoidance strategies.
- Stories that become increasingly complicated with new obstacles appearing each time you make a payment, with excuses like unexpected legal complications, additional government approvals, or currency conversion issues requiring more money.
How to Protect Yourself
- Immediately delete any unsolicited emails or messages promising large sums of money for minimal effort, and never respond even to decline, as responses confirm your contact information is active.
- Research the sender by independently verifying any institutions, companies, or government agencies mentioned using official websites found through search engines, not links provided in the message.
- Refuse all requests for upfront payments regardless of justification, understanding that legitimate inheritance, lottery winnings, or business deals never require beneficiaries to pay fees in advance.
- Consult with your bank, a trusted attorney, or law enforcement before sending any money internationally, especially wire transfers which are irreversible and untraceable once completed.
- Search online for key phrases from the message along with the word 'scam'—these schemes use template scripts, and you'll likely find others who received identical communications.
- Report the scam to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3.gov), the FTC (ReportFraud.ftc.gov), and your email provider to help authorities track these criminal networks and prevent others from becoming victims.
Real-World Examples
A retired teacher in Florida received an email from someone claiming to be a Nigerian petroleum engineer who discovered an over-invoiced contract worth $28 million. The scammer needed an American bank account to transfer the funds and offered 40% as compensation. After the teacher agreed, she was asked to pay $2,500 in legal fees, then $5,000 for tax clearance certificates, then $8,000 for anti-money laundering documentation. Over three months, she sent $18,000 in wire transfers before her bank flagged the transactions and local police intervened.
A small business owner in the UK was contacted via LinkedIn by someone claiming to represent a Middle Eastern royal family seeking investment partners for a gold mining operation. The scammer sent professional-looking contracts and even arranged a phone call with a supposed attorney. The victim paid $12,000 in due diligence fees and customs charges to release equipment before attempting to visit the mine location and discovering the address was a residential apartment building.
An elderly widow received a letter claiming she inherited $4.2 million from a distant relative in South Africa who died in a car accident. A supposed probate attorney sent legal documents bearing official seals and requested $3,200 to process the inheritance claim. When she paid, new complications emerged: bank transfer fees, inheritance tax payments, and emergency legal costs. Over two months, she sent $22,000 in multiple payments before her daughter discovered the fraud and contacted authorities.