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The ‘You’ve Already Won’ Letter in Your Mailbox Is a Trap

The ‘You’ve Already Won’ Letter in Your Mailbox Is a Trap
You open your mailbox and find a thick envelope printed with official-looking logos, a bold headline that says “CONGRATULATIONS — YOU ARE A GUARANTEED WINNER!” and a check for several thousand dollars made out in your name. The letter explains that you have won a “mega prize” in a sweepstakes you never entered. All you have to do is deposit the check, then wire a portion of it — typically a few hundred dollars — to a processing company to cover taxes, insurance, or a “clearance fee,” and the rest of the prize will be released to you within days.

This is not a stroke of luck. It is a classic offline consumer ripoff that has bilked millions of dollars from middle‑class Americans, especially those between the ages of 45 and 64. The scheme is called the fake check sweepstakes scam, and it preys on the natural excitement of a windfall. The scammers know that people in this age group often have a little savings, a sense of financial responsibility, and a willingness to trust printed mail that looks official. That trust is exactly what they exploit.

Here is how it works. The check you receive looks real. It has the bank’s name, a routing number, an account number, and a signature. Banks are required by law to make funds available within a day or two, so when you deposit it, your balance shows the money. You think you are rich. The scammers then pressure you to send the “fee” — often via wire transfer, gift card, or cash reload pack — as quickly as possible. They may call you, email you, or send a follow‑up letter urging you to act fast before the prize expires. You wire the money, feeling smart for following instructions. Days later, your bank discovers the check is counterfeit. The deposit is reversed, the money you sent is gone, and the bank may charge you a return‑check fee. The scammers have your money, your name, your address, and your phone number, and they will try to hit you again.

Why does this work so often? Because the check appears legitimate. Scammers use the account numbers of real companies, or they create fake checks that look like those from well‑known banks. Your own bank’s teller may not catch the forgery during a routine deposit. The scam also exploits the psychological principle of reciprocity: you feel obligated to pay the fee because you already have the prize money — except you don’t. Another red flag is the “winner notification” for a contest you never entered. Legitimate sweepstakes require an entry. You cannot win something you did not enter. Second, no real lottery or sweepstakes operator demands upfront payment of any kind. Taxes on prizes are paid after you receive the winnings, and they are paid to the government, not to a private “processing” company. Third, the address on the envelope is often a P.O. Box in another state or country, and the phone number may be a burner or a VoIP line that cannot be traced.

The Federal Trade Commission has sued and shut down several prize‑mill operations, but new ones pop up constantly. These scammers buy mailing lists of older consumers from data brokers and target them specifically because they tend to be home more often, are more likely to open mail, and are less familiar with online verification tools. They also use language that evokes trust: “official courtesies,” “state‑licensed lottery,” “insured delivery.” All of it is lies.

If you receive such a letter, do not deposit the check. Do not call the number. Do not respond. The only safe action is to shred the letter and the check. You can report it to the Federal Trade Commission at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. You can also forward the letter to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, which investigates mail fraud. If you already deposited the check and wired money, act immediately. Contact your bank, explain the situation, and ask if they can stop the wire. If the money is already gone, file a police report and contact the FTC. Recovery is rare, but reporting helps stop the next victim.

Remember this simple truth: if you have to pay money to get money, it is not a prize. It is a theft. No legitimate sweepstakes, lottery, or prize program asks you to pay a fee upfront. No one sends a real check to a stranger before collecting a processing fee. The envelope in your mailbox is not good news. It is a trap, and the only way to win is to throw it away.


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