Salon.com just posted an article about online romance scams, Facebook status: In a scam relationship, by Tracy Clark-Flory. The scams run like this:
- Perp finds a target online.
- They communicate via email, text and sometimes phone.
- Perp proclaims undying love.
- Maybe perp sends flowers and stuffed teddy bears.
- Perp suddenly has a dire emergency and needs money.
- Target sends money, and keeps sending money until there’s none left.
Apparently, romance scams—known as “love fraud,” according to the article—are a growth industry. The story quoted a man named Rob who lost $14,000 to a woman he never met. He is now a volunteer for RomanceScams.org, which has counseled 50,000 people who believe they were swindled.
According to Salon:
Many of the scammers are based in Nigeria, home of the infamous 419 email scam love fraud is a much savvier twist on that old formula. “Scammers search chat rooms, dating sites, and social networking sites looking for victims,” warns the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center. “The principal group of victims is over 40 years old and divorced, widowed, elderly, or disabled, but all demographics are at risk.” The perpetrators investigate the target by doing a Google search on their name and scouring their online profiles. “Once they have all that information, they create a character that is specific to you and your desires,” Rob says. “In short, they create your dream mate, and they’re very good at what they do, unfortunately.”
The con artists frequently pose as soldiers serving in Afghanistan or Iraq. The problem has gotten so bad that the military has issued press releases warning people not to fall for soldiers asking for money so they can go on leave. Read:
CID warns of Internet romance scams, on Army.mil
Army stresses caution to combat scammers, on Military.com
The Salon article explains how the scammers hook the targets, and the process is familiar to all of us who have been snagged by sociopaths: “The scammers get the target to reveal their most delicate feelings and secrets; and a sense of real intimacy often develops.” And that’s the reason the scams work—people are looking for love.
Plenty of readers commented on the article. Most of the comments expressed this view: Anyone who falls for an online romance scam is a complete idiot.
Read the article and comments:
Facebook status: In a scam relationship, on Salon.com.
Why send money to Nigeria?
Lovefraud has heard from people who have fallen for these online scams. And even though I know how convincing sociopaths are, I must admit that these cases perplexed me.
Yes, I lost $227,000 to my con artist ex-husband. But he was physically with me. He looked me in the eye, made his promises, turned on the tears when necessary. He had sex with me, which released all that oxytocin, the trust hormone. He brought me around to his business friends, creating the illusion that he truly was an entrepreneur.
I know why I gave him my money. But why anyone would send money to a person they never met who lives in Nigeria?
I think the answer lies in the power of our own minds, and I’ll take you through my reasoning.
Fantasy
First of all, it is very possible to have accepting, positive thoughts about people we’ve only met over the computer—just look at all the friendships that have developed here on Lovefraud. Taking this a step further to romance isn’t difficult.
We may not really know what the person looks like or sounds like, because we’ve never met. But as I explain on the Lovefraud.com page about Online Seduction, we fill in any gaps in our knowledge about a potential romantic partner with fantasy:
When you meet people in the real world, you notice their height, weight, grooming, voice, mannerisms—and immediately form conclusions about them. All of this information is missing in e-mail correspondence. You can’t see, smell or touch the person. You don’t even really know if you’re communicating with a man or a woman.
So what do you do? You imagine the person is what you want him or her to be.
Essentially what happens is that in an online romance, we fall in love with our own fantasy. We create an image in our minds of what the person is, and how the person feels about us. And we believe it.
Oxytocin
I referred briefly to oxytocin above. This hormone is thought to be released during hugging, touching and orgasm in both men and women, and acts as a neurochemical in the brain. According to Wikipedia:
Oxytocin evokes feelings of contentment, reductions in anxiety, and feelings of calmness and security around the mate. Many studies have already shown a correlation of oxytocin with human bonding, increases in trust, and decreases in fear.
Oxytocin serves a normal and important function in the human bonding process—it makes us feel calm and trusting with our mates. Nature probably gave us oxytocin so that we want to stay with our partners to raise children, thus helping the survival of the species.
But because it fosters trust, oxytocin can also help us get conned. Paul J. Zak explains this in a post on Psychology Today called How to run a con:
Social interactions engage a powerful brain circuit that releases the neurochemical oxytocin when we are trusted and induces a desire to reciprocate the trust we have been shown—even with strangers.
The key to a con is not that you trust the conman, but that he shows he trusts you. Conmen ply their trade by appearing fragile or needing help, by seeming vulnerable. Because of oxytocin and its effect on other parts of the brain, we feel good when we help others—this is the basis for attachment to family and friends and cooperation with strangers. “I need your help” is a potent stimulus for action.
So, oxytocin doesn’t necessarily require sex in order to be released. It can be triggered by other social interactions—perhaps even those conducted via electronic media.
Oxytocin is released in the brain and causes feelings of trust. But that isn’t the only way in which love affects the brain. According to Dr. Helen Fisher, romantic love actually causes a rewiring of the brain. She also believes that romantic love is an addiction.
For more on the neurological processes involved in romantic love, read:
The drive to love: The neural mechanism for mate selection on HelenFisher.com.
Brain action
You’ve probably heard of the “placebo effect.” Physicians and researchers have long known that people in clinical trials of drugs frequently experience the benefits of the drug, even though they are taking the placebo. Because they believe they are taking the drug, they believe they will get better, and they do.
This is not just an imaginary improvement. According to an article on MSNBC, “research shows that belief in a dummy treatment leads to changes in brain chemistry.” In other words, belief can be just as strong as actual medication.
Read Placebo’s power goes beyond the mind on MSNBC.MSN.com.
And here’s another aspect of the brain: Research has found that the physical structure of the brain isn’t nearly as static as once thought. As explained in Time Magazine:
For decades, the prevailing dogma in neuroscience was that the adult human brain is essentially immutable, hardwired, fixed in form and function, so that by the time we reach adulthood we are pretty much stuck with what we have.
But research in the past few years has overthrown the dogma. In its place has come the realization that the adult brain retains impressive powers of “neuroplasticity”—the ability to change its structure and function in response to experience.
Read How the brain rewires itself on Time.com
The point, therefore, is that the brain is changeable, and it doesn’t necessarily require drugs or a physical incident in order to change. Thoughts and beliefs have the power to change the brain.
Power of imagination
So where am I going with all this? Here is what I think may be happening in romance scams:
- The perp contacts the target, gradually building the target’s love and trust.
- The target believes that the perp is real and they are in a romantic relationship.
- Because of the target’s belief, oxytocin is released in the brain, even though there is no physical touching.
- The belief in love also rewires the brain, just as it does in a real relationship.
- The target may even become addicted to the relationship.
- The target is primed to be conned.
My theory, then, is that in an online romance scam, we believe we are in a true romantic relationship. Our belief causes all the same brain changes that a real world relationship causes. Because of the power of our imaginations, we may be just as susceptible to online scams as we are to real life scams.
Come to think of it, this is probably why we fall for the real life scams. We believe the love is true, even though it isn’t.
(((hens))) Evening, Dear…
HA: Yah, moon bumps. Ever had one of those? 🙂 hehehehe It happens when you are under a fool moon and are gazing up at it. The next morning you will have a bump on your face. Those are called ‘moon bumps’. hehehehe *Inside lifetime joke* 😉
Dear hens, I have been to hell and back but I am here to say that it hasn’t succeeded in taking all of my sanity nor my life. YET! I too carry a HUGE STICK and wow, sometimes I feel like such a MAJOR B**CH but if we don’t look out for “US” who will? hmm? What hasn’t killed me has only made me stronger and wiser.
Thanks for admiring my need for survival, hens. That’s what it comes down to at this point. EARTH CAN BE an awesome place but I guess it’s all about what you accept and what you don’t while you are here. As for me, I prefer to be in a ‘state’ that affords me peace. I am tired of searching for that ‘perfect’ relationship. I don’t believe it exists. The only one that is worth anything is the one I have with myself and my family and all of those people who have cared along this journey – like you… xxoo
LIKE ALL OF YOU.
Oh yes, the threats and the whines are about due to start again. ONLY THIS TIME THERE WILL BE NO RESPONSES FROM ME. “IT” doesn’t like taking ‘no’ for an answer and it is obsessed with me, hens. It isn’t ever going to stop completely until I just move. That will be COMPLETE NC then.
I did the same things, hens: face to the curb; locked the doors; changed the phone numbers; blocked numbers, you name it! I wanted to DUMP IT before “IT” dumped me as another ‘punishment’ for not ‘obeying’. It has FINALLY been quiet for about six weeks. Coming up on the 3 month threshold soon. After 9 years of this, I have the patterns down. 😉
Oh yes, dear hens, DO keep that big stick near by.
We are worth much more than this. SPATHS are like a bad case of herpes: once you catch IT – it never quite entirely goes away; does it?
Nighty Night hens…nice to read you.
Sleep tight.
Dupedster
gnite dupedster and ana – duped it has been 3.5 years for me of nc…..we just learn a better way to live..SINGLE~!
Wow ladies – it’s so scary reading some of your stories and how much I can identify with your emotions. Duped in – the sentence where you wrote, “After 9 years of this, I have the patterns down” I can sooo relate to. It’s been around 8 years for me, however it wasn’t a real eye opener for me until I moved in with him a couple of years ago. Everyone on here has been so amazing and each post, each little experience gives me the courage to work towards my escape from this life.
Hardest thing for me though are his 3 gorgeous boys. I’ve know them all since they were 4, 2 & 1. I know they have their mother with them 70% of the time, but I feel bad for what will happen to their personalities as little men from being in that house 4 nights a fortnight without me there. They adore their father and think he is wonderful! I can’t take that away from him…but in saying that, I provide the structure, the routine, the clean, healthy environment and they depend alot on me when they are there. I know it’s not my problem at the end of the day, but it’s sooo hard to even think about leaving them behind 🙁
Melly,
here’s all I have to tell you.
My spath was 12 when his mom figured out that his dad was cheating on her with dozens of other women and divorced him. Before that, the spath-dad was in Alaska, working on the oil pipeline for many of his growing up years and had lots of other women in trailers to screw. Only the mom was there to raise my ex-spath and his brothers. It didn’t help. My own opinion is that the mom was a doormat, just like I am. That might be what made him into a spath like his dad.
Unless you are a spath-expert, you cannot change what those boys will be. All your empathy can very well be the trigger that make them WORSE. Get away. Do what is best for you and trust that the universe will see it the same way.
hens: 3.5 years? And you are still bothered? Yes; no?
I don’t want to think that this ‘process’ of ‘breaking up’ with spath will take so long!!!!!! NO~~!!!!!! I am NOT going through a long, involved stalking; I just am not. IT WILL stop. It will.
I am NOT going to tolerate nor put up with 3.5 more years of this. I just am not. What is the longest amount of time that anyone here has been bothered after NC? As I have said before, with x sp, a few months goes by and then it starts up again. All of the other times I have tried to get away from it was not very successful….I allowed “IT” to slither back into my life, being conned by my conscious into caring again. THIS IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN ANYMORE.
Oh sure, in the back of my mind, I continue to hope and pray that the heavens will open up and rain down it’s wisdom and graces upon “IT” and that it will wake up and smell the coffee but from everything I have been reading and studying, it isn’t ever going to happen. It just is never going to happen!
I am not going to continue torturing myself with this. I am on the fast track to making it ‘history’, for eternity. And, there is NO ‘coming back’ anymore. Not after everything “IT” has put me through. Oh sure, I was vulnerable….’controlled’….I allowed it to happen but that doesn’t mean IT SHOULD HAVE HAPPENED. Get my point? The lack of social graces – the lack of social and/or moral conscious from “IT”….unexcusable and unforgivable.
I am sorry Melly that you are having such a difficult time with your decisions. I will pray that your situation will become clearer to you and that you will indeed make all the right decisions. Sometimes we just have to take pause and realize that we need to take care of ourselves. Sometimes that is the ‘greater plan’. 😉
Peace, love and light guys…
It’s almost 4 am here and here I am: up, ruminating, already but no where near LIKE what it USED TO BE before I got here!
Together – chatting with all of you and my therapy, is really and truly helping me ‘get the big picture’…I am NOT going to die like this. I just am not. I have been fighting real hard and struggling like crazy and giving this all I have because I just am NOT going to die like this; I just am not.
I refuse to allow “IT” to take the final days and time I have left. IT just isn’t going to get my life from me. IN NO MANNER. I am ‘worded up’ and ‘aware’ NOW. I just am not going to participate in this ‘roadshow’ any longer. Period. It’s over for me. I have finally escaped and I am not going back to that hell. I just am not. It WILL stay away from me this time or we will do something else. That’s all there is to it.
duped – oh my, no not bothered by it anymore, just here to cheer you on…and sometimes intertain the troops…if I can make someone smile or giggle when they are in the depths of dispair because of the IT in their lives then I have done a good thing..my humor is not always appreciated or understood, but if I can find humor in dispair then I can go on another day.
Lovefraud is my facebook – if I could post photos of my wieners, my grandkids, my garden I would…I have made some good friends here, I have been sending Oxy photos of my tomatoes, I dont think she appreciates them because her maters didnt do well this year…..
Duped there are many (it’s) in my life, Lovefraud has helped me find meaning to the madness, lovefraud feels like home most of the time, people come and go here, I have trouble letting go–go figure.
Yeah, joy/one step, phonies turn on the charm and “humor” all right. It’s become an Internet dating cliche: “sense of humor.” That’s why I don’t do Match.com; it’s Cliche Cinema. The stupidest spath could crack that site’s code.
What I refer to as humor is something different. A sense of the absurd, a change-up of the pattern. It’s a weapon, what I have that counters someone else’s script. I just throw a wrench in there, mess up the well-oiled machine.
Hey DUPED_IN_SOCAL: It’s a superstitious thing, I’m sure, and I have no idea if you’ve tried it or if it will work to stop stalkings.
After being stalked for about five years, off and on, by a spath ex-roommate, I realized she only showed up when I had been thinking about her.
I had been strategizing for the next time she showed up: what I’d say, where I would run, how I would humiliate her if it came to that. It’s weird how this works. Our fantasies become real.
I speculate sometimes if these people are real, as in, have a life outside my world. Maybe they’re my own hallucinations. It’s that strange.
It’s normal, after we leave the spath behind, to go through it over and over again. What happened? Why? What could I have done different? It’s like their spirit is still in the room, and their body keeps coming back to claim it. At some point, when we stop doing that, they leave us alone.
sistersister – please explain further. i may have missed something you posted (forgive me if I have). you see the spath’s humour WAS ALL ABOUT THE ABSURD…so when you wrote that I had a hard time separating out what YOU might mean – but I so wann know!
Interesting. So HE was throwing the wrench into your expectations.
I was just observing that spaths depend on a predictable response from us. When they don’t get one, they get all confused!
After all, this is their game, to throw you off your guard, not yours.
Turn the tables.