In a car park somewhere on the rugged Cornish coast, a Ghanian scammer stands shivering and confused. He has been sent here to collect the payment for 10kg of non-existent gold promised to the victim of one of his scams.
The fraudster is expecting to get £234,000 in cash. It’s a massive sum, by far outweighing the costs of the 6,000 mile round trip from the Ghanian capital, Accra.
The problem is that he has been waiting for longer than he’d like, and there is still no sign of the money. In fact, his victim hasn’t even shown up.
Hidden in a car nearby, a man congratulates himself on a job well done: another scammer taken on a so-called ‘safari’, and with photos to prove it.
In the shadows: Hidden in his car, one scambaiter captures the evidence of his ‘safari’
‘That was great fun…that cost them a few thousand dollars to organise,’ the mastermind told This is Money.
The man in question is a scambaiter, someone who manipulates fraudsters into wasting their time or money.
The scambaiting community is understandably secretive, and one of its most famous members will only speak to This is Money using the alias of Mr Pricky.
Mr Pricky runs a YouTube channel, ScamBait Central, on which he shares videos of his attempts to take scammers for a ride.
‘We’re not really caped crusaders,’ Mr Pricky insists, ‘We dislike scammers, we loathe them and we loathe what they do to ordinary people in society.
‘I can’t say that we do it purely to do good. We do it because we have a lot of fun. It can be very satisfying.’
Wild goose chase: Mr Pricky led this scammer 3,000 miles from his home in Ghana
According to the scambaiter, they do their best to occupy as much of a scammer’s time as possible: ‘It could be days. It could be weeks, months, even years. Some scambaiters have had scammers on the hook for five, even as much as 10 years,’ he said.
‘It can be quite cathartic, but also it helps to keep them away from real prospective victims,’ he added.
However, the business of scambaiting is not just about having a laugh, and the consequences of being careless could be serious.
‘The criminals we bait can be very dangerous and violent, and some of them are murderous, he said. ‘I get death threats often, and some of them I take seriously.’
Because of this, he doesn’t talk about his scambaiting, even to friends or family.
‘Very few people actually know about it, but I’m a very private person, because I was with the with the Ministry of Defence for over 20 years, and I’ve been a Samaritan for 34 years,’ he said. ‘So confidentiality and keeping my mouth shut has been the cornerstone of most of my adult life.’
The only one who does know? ‘My accountant’, came the reply.
On top of being careful, Mr Pricky says that his scambaiter community follows a strict set of guidelines.
His community rules include that scambaiters should not ‘burn’ the scammers by giving away that they are being duped. They should also never involve innocent third parties.
The scambaiter added: ‘We discovered very early on in our community, which was formed in 2003, that [burning them] educated scammers, and they learned from the mistakes that we were gleefully pointing out.’
‘They became better scammers and more likely to rob your grandparents blind the next time round.’
His group also avoid taking scammers’ money, never send any them copies of IDs and never report their email addresses.
‘The scammer will open a new email account within three minutes and start scamming again,’ he said, ‘but because they’re using a new address, the address that they were using before that we’ve posted on a scam warning site is now redundant.’
In harm’s way: Mr Pricky lured a scammer from London to Cornwall on his latest of more than eighty ‘safaris’
Another scambaiter, SkeletonSyskey, is clear on what drives him.
‘My motivation was to find who these people are and see what I can do to stop them,’ he told This is Money.
‘I want to do this, I’ve got to do this as much as I can,’ he said, ‘I have more drive for this than I do for my actual work.
‘I do put in many hours each week, in a way it is more than a job. In the past when I have had jobs, I’ve been the kind of person to do 9 to 5, get paid and then I just separate myself from my work when I get home. I don’t tend to talk shop.
‘With this it is different.’
When he first started, SkeletonSyskey was acting as a carer for his father, who has Alzheimer’s, so he found that he had free time to focus on scambaiting.
‘Since then, the channel has become quite a bit bigger, and I’ve found that I now have to dedicate a lot of time to this,’ he said.
‘My father is now in a care home and being looked after, freeing up more time to do this, but I also have to do my normal job.’
The scambaiter has more than 15,000 subscribers on YouTube.
SkeletonSyskey began by reporting the scammers he uncovered to Action Fraud, finding the name of the company that was trying to scam him.
‘My plan at the start was to find out who these companies were and report them,’ he said. ‘In the beginning I would report them straight away to Action Fraud.’
Dogged pursuit: SkeletonSyskey protects his identity in his online videos, instead appearing as an animated Shiba Inu dog
‘I provided the phone call as evidence, but I heard nothing back from Action Fraud. A few years later another scambaiter ended up doing a video on the exact same company, and I realised that company was still active.’
The lack of action by the authorities was frustrating, he said. ‘I found that it is better to speak to other scambaiters to get more information on them and then try to get them shut down,’ he added.
They may not consider themselves caped crusaders, but there is something superhero-esque about scambaiters’ double lives – perhaps their hidden identities and their altruistic desire to help others by distracting scammers.
But being a scambaiter also comes at a price, as it requires individuals to hide their real details at all costs.
Unsurprisingly, SkeletonSyskey’s exploits go unnoticed by those around him, hidden behind his digital likeness in the form of a Shiba Inu dog.
‘It’s a fine balance,’ he said, ‘I have learned to separate what I do here on YouTube to what I am up to in real life.
‘Only my brother knows, to be honest. The only reason he knows is that he walked in once while I was speaking to scammers on the phone.
‘It doesn’t feel like I’m hiding it, but I don’t talk about it with friends and family, there are always other things to talk about. I’m always busy living a normal life.’
‘There are people in scambaiting I’ve known for over a decade, and I don’t even know their first name,’ Mr Pricky told me. ‘I don’t know what they do for a living. I don’t know about their familial backgrounds.
‘We are very secretive.’