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Scammer's address Toronto, ON, CAN
Scammer's email [email protected]
Country United States
Victim Location FL 34232, USA
Type of a scam Phishing
Dear *******, The status on your order has just been changed to: ON HOLD Additional details: Name: ******* ******** - ************.com - Date: 04/24/23 Potential extra cost: $ 30,-
How to fix: It's important for us to quickly
get your order on the road without charging an extra $30 to your card. You can make this happen by filling in the missing
details here: Continue with the help of this URL: https://brevsandning.org/41OErCP/Anderson/cami916%40live.com With
Kind regards, Leo Roberts – Shipment Coordinator US & LATAM Canada gold heist: police investigating $20m of highvalue™ cargo stolen from Toronto airport The cargo was reported missing on Monday after arriving on an aircraft early in
the evening, police say Police in Canada are investigating a brazen heist of nearly C$20m (US$14.8m) in gold and other high value items at Toronto Pearson airport. On Thursday evening, Peel Regional Police said the gold and
other goods were stolen on Monday after containers were offloaded from an aircraft. An aircraft arrived here at the
airport in the early evening. As per normal procedure, the aircraft was unloaded and cargo was transported from the aircraft
to a holding cargo facility inspector Stephen Duivesteyn said while announcing the theft. What I can say is that the
container [had] a high-value shipment. It did contain gold but was not exclusive to gold and contained other items of
monetary value. Investigators from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were also looking into the theft, which is one of
the largest in Canadian history. The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, citing the active police investigation, declined
to comment on the theft. Goldmines from northern Ontario often ship bullion through the city's airport, which handles
nearly half of the country's air cargo. Duivesteyn said he wouldn't call it a professional job at this time, adding
that the investigation was ongoing and the incident was isolated. Police did not identify the intended destination of the stolen
cargo, nor did they confirm the gold was still in the country. This is very rare. Duivesteyn said. But it isn't the first
time a Toronto-area airport has made headlines for a gold heist. On 25 September 1952, $215,000 worth of gold bullion was
stolen at Malton Airport, the precursor to Pearson. At the time it was the largest gold robbery in Canadian history. Adjusted
for inflation, the theft today would have been worth C$2.3m. During that heist, six wooden boxes of gold were taken from a
steel cage from the airport's cargo area before they were loaded on a plane bound for Montreal. It just seemed to
vanish, one investigator told the Toronto Star at the time. The seemingly perfect crime, with no witnesses, was never
solved. Trans-Canada Air Lines eventually changed its name to Air Canada in 1965 the same airline believed to have
been hit by Monday's theft. Previous high value heists have targeted a priceless photograph and the country's vast
maple syrup stockpile. In 2014, mastermind Richard Valli res swiped C$17m in syrup from a Quebec warehouse, part of
the province's strategic reserve. The caper spawned both a wide-ranging investigation that eventually took him down and a Hollywood screenplay. A recent gold heist in Canada may be the largest, but not the first Len Goodman obituary:
From the East End to Strictly Come Dancing studio In April 2004, the BBC took a huge gamble. Desperate to find a new
show with mass appeal, it had come up with a seemingly bizarre solution. Ballroom dancing was deeply unfashionable. The
quickstep and jive hailed from an era of Brylcreem and Butlin's holidays. Now, the corporation was attempting to make the
nostalgic preserve of a few elderly enthusiasts the centerpiece of its Saturday nights. Just days before the first show, the
producers hit a crisis. Four judges had been offered contracts: Craig Revel Horwood, Arlene Phillips, Bruno Tonioli, and a
well-known figure from the world of dance. At the very last moment, the fourth judge dropped out. The BBC was at a loss.
Dozens of former world champions - giants of their profession - had already been interviewed, but none had been right. The
show's professional dancers were asked if any luminaries had been missed. Erin Boag, the former New Zealand champion,
tentatively offered a suggestion. "Have you tried Len Goodman?" she asked. "He's just a dance teacher from Dartford, but
he's a bit of a character." East End barrow boy Leonard Gordon Goodman was born in Farnborough, Kent, on 25 April 1944.
He grew up in London's East End in an over-crowded two-up, two-down terrace. There was "lots of love and laughter, but
very little money", he recalled. It was a tough neighbourhood. Two of his uncles had been active members of Sir Oswald
Mosley's British Union of Fascists before World War Two. When hostilities broke out, angry crowds attacked the family home
in Howard Street. Serious injuries were only prevented when the sound of an air raid siren dispersed the mob. The family
scraped a living selling vegetables from barrows. Goodman's grandfather Albert pawned his gold watch every Monday
morning to buy the week's supply. Len watched the old man attract customers with a smooth patter dotted with earthy
phrases. He later used many of his grandad's lines on Strictly Come Dancing. "Yum, yum, pig's bum," was one of his. Albert
Goodman was good at his job. The barrow became two shops in Bethnal Green - with enough money left over to buy Len's
parents a greengrocer business in Kent. Soon after they moved, the marriage fell apart. Goodman's father moved away, and
his mother buried the shame of divorce by throwing herself into her job. 'You'll be a failure' At school, young Len enjoyed
football and cricket - but was no academic. "It's obvious you're never going to amount to anything, Goodman," his
headmaster declared. "You're a failure in class. You'll be a failure in life." To help his mother, he pushed a barrow of
vegetables around town every evening - just as his grandfather had. This, Goodman believed, was a more valuable
education than school had ever provided - as it taught him how to speak to people and engage them. At the age of 14, he
went to his first dance class. He had little love for the foxtrot, but a keen interest in girls. The most thrilling moment of the
night, he later wrote, was the 'excuse me' dance - during which you had to kiss your partner goodbye. A year later,
Goodman left school "with no sense of loss on either side". He began an apprenticeship in an engineering factory but, by his
own admission, was dreadful at it. Ex-Strictly head judge Len Goodman dies at 78 Tributes pour in for ex-Strictly judge
Goodman He took a welding course and found work in the Harland and Wolff Royal docks in Woolwich. It wasn't a job he
liked, but it brought in enough money to enjoy himself at weekends. Goodman became a sharp-dressed Mod, hanging out
on his Vespa in Brighton on Saturday afternoons, trying to avoid fisticuffs with gangs of rival Rockers. Like many of his
generation, he worshipped rock 'n' roll and regarded ballroom dancing as something 'old fogeys' did. Then, he broke his
metatarsal playing football on Hackney Marshes, and was advised to find an activity to help build its strength again. Falling
in love Joy Tolhurst was a former world champion. At her first dance lesson, Goodman was hampered by wearing a
winklepicker on one foot and a carpet slipper on the other. Slowly, he fell in love with the both the waltz and Mrs Tolhurst's
daughter. He and Cherry Tolhurst became partners on and off the floor. Their first competition was a Pontin's sponsored
event at the Royal Albert Hall. Goodman practiced in his front room, with a lamp placed behind him - so he could see his hip
action in the shadows. As the couple sashayed onto the hallowed stage, Goodman heard great bellows from the audience.
Fifty-three fellow dock workers had hired a coach to come and support him, and were well lubricated up. When Joy's
husband died suddenly, she asked 22-year-old Len to help her teach. Learning from an ex-welder was a shock to students
used to a poised former professional. Cha-cha-cha By 1973, Goodman and Cherry were driving thousands of miles a year,
demonstrating the cha-cha-cha and rumba to amateur classes the length and breadth of the country. They married and
opened their own dance school in Dartford. The couple won a rising star competition in Blackpool - but decided not to
compete professionally again. "I got fed up with the politics of the business," explained Goodman. "The fact that you had to
placate and schmooze people that you didn't really like, because you did not upset them, as they were judges." The decision
took a toll on his marriage which, he admitted, had become more of a dance partnership than a relationship. When the
dancing stopped, everything collapsed. Cherry left him for a multi-millionaire Frenchman, leaving Len in an empty house and
with only half a business. His heartstrings were healed when he met Lesley, a former wife of the manager of Black Sabbath.
A year later, the couple had a son. Night Fever What saved his business was the film Saturday Night Fever. Goodman put
up posters: "You've heard the music, now learn the dances." There were queues halfway down Dartford High Street and,
when Grease came out, "the seam of gold turned into a whole goldmine".
Scammer's email [email protected]
Country United States
Victim Location FL 33578, USA
Type of a scam Phishing
Thank you.
Type of a scam Phishing
FYI
Please find the attached for wire transfer copy from our bank. We have remitted full amount to you.
Thanks
Erin Olson
Finance Manager