The
United States Federal Trade Commission hosts a page dedicated to romance and online dating scams: It highlights the most common lies that should raise red flags, including the most common lies current scammers are telling.
The FBI warns most romance scams and romance scam tactics follow the same three-step process.
Step 1: Establish Rapid Intimacy and Trust
In the opening days or weeks of a romance scam, like any romance, the target is contacted, then “love-bombed” with attention, affirmation, and affection. Sometimes messages and emails may arrive like bouquets of flowers—by the dozens—in early days.
Scammers’ (fake) biographies sometimes sound as if they came straight out of a romance novel or spy movie; military members, undercover agents, oil rig workers, doctors on international relief missions. They can’t meet you in person or travel; can’t use “normal” communication channels like phone or video chat, can’t verify anything they’ve told the target because
reasons.
But they have been so attentive, affectionate, and giving to people who are generally starved of human connection, the stage is set.
“You trust me, right?”
Step 1 is complete.
Step 2: The Ask.
Next, for reasons that
also sound plausible, but which would fall apart under logical questioning, the scammer needs
money. Urgently. And the target is the only person on Earth the scammer can turn to for these funds, which are generally requested for reasons that appeal to a victim’s empathy:
- To pay for surgery (for the scammer or vulnerable others)
- To arrange travel for the star-crossed lovers to finally meet (many unforeseen difficulties and issues will arise after the money is dispensed; plans will fall through; sadly, the money will be lost)
- To help the scammer or others escape sudden danger or misfortune
- To bribe officials, guards, or governments in pursuit of critical work
- To get out of jail, to escape a murderous local crime lord, to pay off debts under threat…
The need for the cash is always personal, immediate, critical, time-sensitive, and (always) unverifiable.
The point is, scammers will need
your money. Nobody else’s.
You (the victim) will be the only
possible source from which they can access money.
Step 3: Payment Directions.
Not only do romance scammers suddenly and urgently need your money—they will have no compunction thanking you for your generosity by immediately telling you they also need it in specific
forms.
The requested forms of payment will be
untraceable, irreversible, instant, and anonymous:
Now that you’ve learned more about how these types of scams work, do you think you may have encountered one before? And now that you know the signs, what will you do differently?