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Clairvoyant or psychic scams

Unsolicited emails and letters from bogus clairvoyants and psychics prey directly on the vulnerable and can be particularly unpleasant. There are a number of instances where they have been received by people at the time of some misfortune, such as bereavement, and have caused considerable distress.

In some cases, these mailings adopt a more aggressive tone, suggesting that the recipient will actually experience some misfortune if they do not respond by the sending money requested.

Example letter/email:

“I accidentally discovered this amazing secret. I wish to send it to you free. In fact, I am convinced that over the next 30 days a ‘Miracle’ will certainly occur, one which could shelter you from need for the rest of your days…”

This is an example of a psychic mailing. The information which follows suggests that the recipient can guarantee good fortune for themselves by paying a sum of money for the "loan" of "Merlin's Magic Wand" for a number of months. (Also on offer is a "gift worth more than £10" in return for a prompt reply). It includes anonymous endorsements from people whose lives are claimed to have been changed.

Mail of this kind should be treated with exactly the same scepticism as all other forms of unsolicited scam mailing.

  • Don’t reply to these mailings.
  • Destroy them without responding.

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Did you know

If you discover a fault on an electrical item within the first few months of purchase you should go back to the retailer who sold you the item (not the manufacturer).

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