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Magic spells websites are Fake ? - Will - 06-12-2013 02:51 PM

Fake Magic Websites:

i have contacted 2 major websites for a love spell one is http://www.air.ca.howzit.co.za/business-services/traditional-healing/gauteng/bryanston/5-849-77752/kiboso-mama-norah-herbal-and-spiritual-healer.html whom told me to send them $200 USD to a Kibugo Ibrahimof 29 power street Germiston SOUTHAFRICA so I did, then few days later she said there was a curse on my ex preventing her from loving me and I need to send them $600 for a magic black box to put the curse in which they will send to me and I will have to put it under my bed.
I was obviously vonerable at the time and hoped for some miracle and still do but for these people to steel from people is pretty sad,to both these people I paid the initial $400 but when they asked me to pay the rediculass amount for strange reasons I started asking questions and they dident like that. Other sites associated with Dr. Imam mujibu and kiboso mama Norah are http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kiboso-mama-norah/294658057326386?ref=stream
http://mosselbay.adsafrica.co.za/item/83634/
http://stellenbosch.adsafrica.co.za/item/84436/
yep they are all bloody cons and fake sand liers, yes i admit i was fooled,they sold it and stupid me bought it lieraly. i hate my self for it too, i guess you cant have faith in anything these days Sad
i realy hope this comes up in searches and people out there see this before they make this same mistake!


- Mordent - 06-12-2013 02:59 PM

Really. You are kidding. Surely not. </sarcasm>


- CAB - 06-12-2013 03:15 PM

Anybody with an IQ that makes it out of the double digit range already knows this.


- Drunkengrandfather812 - 06-12-2013 03:21 PM

wow. learning curve.. don't give away your money so easily and be so trusting. if you really want to do those sorts of spells you can look them up free on the internet. they do not interfere with free will however. work on your self to make your self a more attractive candidate, build up your confidence, have fun and genuinely happy confident people attract those around them.


- Max Cruise - 06-12-2013 03:30 PM

You are a 27 year old male working in IT so you have some smarts yet you paid $200, $200, and $400 for love spells?
Sir, you LET yourself be scammed.
First, magic spells that actually work DO NOT EXIST.
Never in human history has a magic spell worked.
Second, as an IT guy you should know major scammed originate out of Africa. And where did you send the money? Africa.
You did the same as taking a pile of your money and setting it on fire.
ALL MAGIC SPELL WEBSITES ARE FAKE!!!
Tattoo that on your forehead so you are reminded each time you look in the mirror.
OR
Your question is a clever ploy to post addresses and websites for scam magic spell websites so you do not get reported.


- Shick - 06-12-2013 03:40 PM

you're an idiot for faslling for this and it's your own fault...


- chubbybeef991 - 06-12-2013 03:53 PM

Sorry to read that you lost money to a scammer running a scam but happy that you found this site to post your story.

Thanks for posting up that information on a scam.

Making a scammer's scam googlable on every scam-warner-anti-fraud-busting site you can find is a great way to slow that scammer down when a suspicious potential victim goes looking for information, finds your post containing the name the scammer is using, his email address, phone number and the emails themselves and then that potential victim does not become a scam victim because you took the time "get the word out".

Wasting a scammer's time legally and safely is called "scambaiting". If you google that word, you will find sites where you can read scambaits, post up the emails and email addresses of scammers, post up a fake website, read up on how to alert a hosting company that they are hosting a fake website, ask questions and learn all about the hobby of scambaiting.

Since that scammer intended to steal your money, he did not give you his real life information. All you have is one of his fake names, one of his free email addresses, one of his fake stories and one of his paid-for-in-cash cell phone numbers. None of that information is going to help your local law enforcement agency track down that anonymous scammer sitting in a cyber cafe half way around the world from you.