Oh dear Lord, dear readers, I’m literally rolling on the floor laughing again. Just when you think you’ve seen the dumbest scam attempt, along comes Mrs. Leakena Sophan with her heavenly twist.
This time she doesn’t hit you straight with 10.5 million dollars in an ATM card. No, first she plays the sweet, caring, God-fearing lady. “Greetings Dear beloved in the Lord,” she writes, sounding like a Sunday school teacher who’s genuinely worried about your soul and your inbox.
She’s just following up on an important letter she sent a couple of weeks ago. She hasn’t heard back, so she’s sweetly asking if you even received her previous emails. How thoughtful. How incredibly touching.Of course she’s only checking whether her earlier message arrived.
No pressure, no drama – just a warm, polite little nudge with “Warm regards” at the end. One could almost believe a kind-hearted Christian woman is truly concerned about a total stranger’s mailbox. Almost.But we know better. This is the classic soft-opening move. The gentle, harmless follow-up email designed to get you to reply. The moment you answer with something like “Yes, I didn’t receive anything” or “Yes, I’m interested,” the next email will drop the real bomb: a sudden inheritance, a dead millionaire uncle, blocked funds, an ATM card loaded with millions, or some “humanitarian fund.”
Then come the requests for your personal data, the “small clearance fees,” and the inevitable demand for Apple Gift Cards or Steam cards. Same old pathetic script, just wrapped in cheap holy perfume this time.Mrs. Leakena Sophan is not a pious lady with a good heart. She’s a scammer trying the “nice and harmless” route to lower your guard.
Using religious language is especially sneaky because it works better on believers and makes people less suspicious. But in the end, she wants exactly the same as the Dubai UPS gang: your data, your trust, and then your money.
Short and brutal: If you receive an email from Mrs. Leakena Sophan starting with the holy greeting “Dear beloved in the Lord,” delete it immediately. Do not even reply with “Yes, the email arrived.” Any response only confirms that your address is active and you’re willing to engage – and then the real scam emails will flood in.These people change names, companies, and even their tone like they change underwear, but the goal stays exactly the same: to rip you off. Whether it’s Dubai UPS, IMF packages, or now “Warm regards from the Lord” – it’s all the same cheap fraud.
Share this post so as many people as possible see through this soft, holy version too. The more we publicly mock these scammers, the less successful they become. And to Mrs. Leakena Sophan and all her colleagues: Get a real job already. This fake pious act doesn’t suit you. It’s not even embarrassing anymore – it’s just pathetic.Stay suspicious, stay beautifully cynical, and above all: Don’t let yourself be fooled so cheaply and sanctimoniously.
The original mail:
Mrs. Leakena Sophan
Greetings Dear beloved in the Lord,
I am following up on the letter I sent a couple of weeks ago
regarding an important matter. As I have not yet received a
response, I wanted to confirm whether you received my previous
emails. Could you kindly let me know if they reached you?
Thank you for your time and attention.
Warm regards,
Mrs. Leakena Sophan
