Here's what this email scam looks like:

This scam, which first appeared in December 2006, is kind of a reversal of the traditional Nigerian 419 scam - instead of someone promising to hand you money because you happen to have the same last name as a lottery winner, the sender of this scam email offers *not* to kill you if you send them cash.
Variations on this theme include various warnings listed from Hollywood movies ("DO NOT CALL THE POLICE/FBI!") and $US dollar amounts four to five times greater than the $20,000 fee listed here.
Bottom line: if you get an email from someone who says they've been contracted to kill you, unless you're Tony Soprano, or are chronically late on making good your local bookie, it's a scam.
Note: As reported by Consumer Affairs back in January, some of the scammers have added a neat twist: they follow up the original email with an email claiming to be from the FBI's London office.
In the follow-up email, the "FBI's London Office" claims that they have information on an individual wanted for murder, including the fact that your name has been found on a " hit list" they now have in their possession, and then asks you to contact them to "assist" with the investigation.
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