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Info on the number +27867215448

Telephone number +27867215448 is a number from South Africa. The area code is 8672. The number is designated as being used for Special Service telephones. The number was originally operated by the provider Information Services.

Number portability may mean that this number is no longer used as a Special Service number, be assigned to a different provider or be being operated from a different location (even overseas in the case of VoIP numbers). If the number is being used to call you then it is also possible that the number is being spoofed and does not actually belong to the person using it.

Here is some general information about the number.

Country Code: 27
Country Name: South Africa
Type: Special Service
Original Provider: Information Services
Validity: The number is the correct length for a South African phone number.

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This number is recorded in our database for the following scams:

8th May 2019 - Lottery Scam

On 8th May 2019, telephone number +27867215448 was reported as being used by scammers to pretend to be Chantel Owen using email address chantelowen84@gmail.com as part of a Lottery Scam.

A Lottery Scam is a variation of an Advance Fee Fraud Scam. Instead of the victim being offered an inheritance or some other funds by a stranger, they will be told that their email has won an online lottery and to collect their prize they just have to email someone to claim it. Of course, there will be fees that need to be paid, and the prize (usually cash, but sometimes luxury cars as well) doesn't actually exist. These scams often pretend that the lottery is being sposored by a multi-national corportation sch as Ford, BMW, Microsoft or Facebook; although sometimes they claim to actually be a real lottery such as the UK National Lottery. There is no such thing as a lottery that picks random email addresses to win - if you haven't purchased a ticket for a specific lottery then you can't win it.

Here is the email that the scammer sent to his victims.
Beneficiary

Your email address has been selected as one of the lucky winners in the second batch of the on going Google 19th Anniversary Award as organized by Google Africa branch office in Johannesburg, South Africa. Therefore? You have been awarded the sum of Eight Hundred and Fifty Thousand United States Dollars (US$850,000.00) only.

See below how to claim your prize.

Details of the Winning
BATCH NUMBER: YPB/08/APA-43658
REFERENCE NUMBER: YPN560992011
Send the following information below:
NAME:
AGE:
SEX:
ADDRESS:
OCCUPATION: =20
COUNTRY:
NATIONALITY:
TELEPHONE:
FAX NUMBER:
PLEASE NOTE THAT A COPY OF YOUR PASSPORT OR YOUR DRIVERS LICENSE IS NEEDED
WHILE SENDING YOUR INFORMATION:

This promotion was set-up to encourage the active usage of the Internet Explorer=C2=AE GOOGLE Page. we do believe that with your winning prize, you will continue to be active and patronage to the Internet Explorer=C2=AE GOOGLE Page.
TO FILE FOR YOUR CLAIM...

Contact The Processing Manager:

Mrs.chantel Owen
Tel: +27 73 866 6618
Fax: + 27 867 215 448
Email:chantelowen84@gmail.com
Email;chantelowen@workmail.co.za

The Google Lottery Promotion team congratulates you once again on your winning.

Yours Faithfully,
Mrs. Pamela Johnson
(Google Management.)

Further details of this report can be found on our forum

8th May 2019 - Lottery Scam

On 8th May 2019, telephone number +27867215448 was reported as being used by scammers to pretend to be Chantel Owen using email address chantelowen@workmail.co.za as part of a Lottery Scam.

A Lottery Scam is a variation of an Advance Fee Fraud Scam. Instead of the victim being offered an inheritance or some other funds by a stranger, they will be told that their email has won an online lottery and to collect their prize they just have to email someone to claim it. Of course, there will be fees that need to be paid, and the prize (usually cash, but sometimes luxury cars as well) doesn't actually exist. These scams often pretend that the lottery is being sposored by a multi-national corportation sch as Ford, BMW, Microsoft or Facebook; although sometimes they claim to actually be a real lottery such as the UK National Lottery. There is no such thing as a lottery that picks random email addresses to win - if you haven't purchased a ticket for a specific lottery then you can't win it.

Here is the email that the scammer sent to his victims.
Beneficiary

Your email address has been selected as one of the lucky winners in the second batch of the on going Google 19th Anniversary Award as organized by Google Africa branch office in Johannesburg, South Africa. Therefore? You have been awarded the sum of Eight Hundred and Fifty Thousand United States Dollars (US$850,000.00) only.

See below how to claim your prize.

Details of the Winning
BATCH NUMBER: YPB/08/APA-43658
REFERENCE NUMBER: YPN560992011
Send the following information below:
NAME:
AGE:
SEX:
ADDRESS:
OCCUPATION: =20
COUNTRY:
NATIONALITY:
TELEPHONE:
FAX NUMBER:
PLEASE NOTE THAT A COPY OF YOUR PASSPORT OR YOUR DRIVERS LICENSE IS NEEDED
WHILE SENDING YOUR INFORMATION:

This promotion was set-up to encourage the active usage of the Internet Explorer=C2=AE GOOGLE Page. we do believe that with your winning prize, you will continue to be active and patronage to the Internet Explorer=C2=AE GOOGLE Page.
TO FILE FOR YOUR CLAIM...

Contact The Processing Manager:

Mrs.chantel Owen
Tel: +27 73 866 6618
Fax: + 27 867 215 448
Email:chantelowen84@gmail.com
Email;chantelowen@workmail.co.za

The Google Lottery Promotion team congratulates you once again on your winning.

Yours Faithfully,
Mrs. Pamela Johnson
(Google Management.)

Further details of this report can be found on our forum

5th June 2017 - Lottery Scam

On 5th June 2017, telephone number +27867215448 was reported as being used by scammers to pretend to be Elizabeth C Hens using email address elizabethhens@outlook.com as part of a Lottery Scam.

A Lottery Scam is a variation of an Advance Fee Fraud Scam. Instead of the victim being offered an inheritance or some other funds by a stranger, they will be told that their email has won an online lottery and to collect their prize they just have to email someone to claim it. Of course, there will be fees that need to be paid, and the prize (usually cash, but sometimes luxury cars as well) doesn't actually exist. These scams often pretend that the lottery is being sposored by a multi-national corportation sch as Ford, BMW, Microsoft or Facebook; although sometimes they claim to actually be a real lottery such as the UK National Lottery. There is no such thing as a lottery that picks random email addresses to win - if you haven't purchased a ticket for a specific lottery then you can't win it.

Further details of this report can be found on the ScamWarners.com forum

*NOTE* Phone numbers can be regularly re-assigned if the person using them stops paying the bill. This number was included in scammer emails or websites on the dates shown above, but may have since been reassigned. If you have evidence of more recent scam activity using the number, please use the contact page to let us know or post the details in our forum. You can also add brief comments in the comments section below.

This number could also be written in the following formats

27867215448 +27867215448 0027867215448 01127867215448 001127867215448
01027867215448 27 86 721 5448 27 (86) 721 5448 +27 86 721 5448 +27 (86) 721 5448
0027 86 721 5448 0027 (86) 721 5448 01127 86 721 5448 01127 (86) 721 5448 001127 86 721 5448
001127 (86) 721 5448 01027 86 721 5448 01027 (86) 721 5448