British woman conned online in Nigerian dating scam.A British woman claimed a Nigerian gang posing as an online love interest conned her out of £20k.Sometimes i feel all these people who get conned online are just begging to be conned! How can you be conned with all the coverage and warnings around at this time? Even the dating sites put warnings there.Why do you want to give money out to somebody you don't even know?Some people deserve to be punished for their stupidity! I'm sorry,but i feel very strongly about this.And all this Nigerian connection is beginning to sound like an easy way out,a plea for pity.
56-year-old 'Elizabeth' (not her real name) - appeared on Good Morning Britain yesterday, April 19 to warn people of the dangers of online dating. After thinking she was was dating an engineer from Southampton who had a contract out in Dubai, it turned out to be a scam.
"I was very vulnerable, I had been on my own for a long time and I just wanted to meet someone
'Elizabeth' met 'Harold' a Norwegian man who had a contract in Dubai, which meant it was difficult to meet up - this turned out to be a lie. After being asked about how he won over her trust, she explained:
"He used to email me and tell me how lovely I was, he would make me feel like any woman would want to."
According to her, love wasn't the only thing on the table.
"He said that I could have a job with him as well, to be quite honest with you".
After initially handing over £3,000, in total she gave the scammers more than £20,000. 'Elizabeth' claims they sent up to 20-30 messages and emails a day and said "they were basically brainwashing me.
Susanna Reid and Piers Morgan pressed the victim more, as it was revealed that 'Elizabeth' was targeted by more than one person in the elaborate hoax.
"I believe they were a gang of Nigerian scammers," said Elizabeth.
When Susanna quizzed her on what the police said, Elizabeth said:
"I didn't really get much from the police, they didn't give me a lot of information. They said there was nothing they could do for me."
Good Morning Britain also revealed the latest figures of 'romance fraud' with victims losing £23.3million in 2015.