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Bank Of Hawaii - officeprocurement1000@aol.com

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Matrixy
The Sentinel
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Bank Of Hawaii - officeprocurement1000@aol.com

Post by Matrixy »

from: officeprocurement1000@aol.com <officeprocurement1000@aol.com>
date: Apr 15, 2023, 6:19 PM
subject:
mailed-by: aol.com

From: CLEARANCE ISSUING OFFICER BANK OF HAWAII <

Bank of Hawaii to reopen 3 branches, resume pre-COVID-19 operating ...

Bank of Hawaii,
ACH Operations 121, P.O. Box 71160,
Honolulu, HI 96807-1160.

Dear-

STILL WAITING FOR YOUR WORDS AND ACTION IN CLAIMING YOUR FUND WITH US HERE FOR SO LONG AFTER SEVERAL REMINDERS

I wish to humbly inform you that the total sum of $25.82 million has just been approved for immediate release to your bank coordinates
This notice was released this last Friday been released by the CEO, Mr. Peter S.Ho

Kindly make available your full bank details now for this release process

IS THIS BANK DETAILS YOURS AND CORRECT?
BANK OF AMERICA
ACCOUNT# 0365824940
SWIFT CODE; BOFAUS3N
Routing no. 026009593

Always copy my alternative email below

Congratulation.
FRAUD WARNING: The above information is being provided as a fraud warning. Do not contact the sender of the above email. The source of this information is from a scammer who is a criminal imposter. Any names of real people being used within the above information from this imposter is unauthorized and illegal. Do not provide this scammer any of your personal information. Do not send them any of your personal identity documents. Do not send them any money. Do not call any phone numbers that they provide to you. This email, and all of its content, are part of a fraudulent, criminal act and the only intention of the scammer who sent this email is to steal money from you and to obtain personal information leading to identity theft of the scam victim. If you received the same email (or one very similar) then stop all communication with the scammer immediately. All claims made within the email are lies fabricated by a fraudster and this criminal will never provide you any money, assets, investments, property, commodities, merchandise, employment, romance, or anything of value. Every email scammer uses a completely false identity, thus their names used in the email (and any company name, employment, occupation, street address and/or location information that they provide) is 100% fake. Any photos, scans of passports or other personal identity documents and/or any other documents (government, corporate, legal, financial, etc) or forms that they send to you are all stolen, fake and/or forged and the file attachments they send with their scam emails may also contain viruses. Also avoid all website links that any scammer sends to you because their websites are all fraudulent and may also contain hidden Malware, Trojans, Spyware and/or key loggers. In conclusion, do not send any money to this scammer or you will lose it permanently. Contact with this scammer also places you at risk of identity theft and having your identity wrongfully used for illegal activities, which can place you in legal, financial, and physical danger. Click here to read what qualifies the above email as a scam. Scroll up and click the link at the top of this page for more information about this particular type of scam. Click here if you had interactions with a scammer and need support.

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