<font color='black' size='3' face='Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif'><font size="3">Be afraid. Be very afraid. I never click on links from people unfamiliar to me. And I don't click on links from people I am familiar with unless it is very typical of them. It is better to Google the domain name and see if it is legit, just like you did.<br>
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A new scam is spam phone calls where they fake out the phone number to look like a local number. In one case a woman received a call and the calling number was here own!<br>
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<font size="3">It's a mad mad mad mad world.</font><br>
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<div style="clear:both"><font size="4">Dave Massey</font><br>
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<div style="font-family:arial,helvetica;font-size:10pt;color:black">-----Original Message-----<br>
From: John Nichols <jtnichols18@verizon.net><br>
To: Triumphs@Autox Team. Net (triumphs@autox.team.net) <triumphs@autox.team.net><br>
Sent: Mon, Jul 31, 2017 3:46 pm<br>
Subject: [TR] Queation<br>
<br>
I received an e-mail from a Jamie McNally purporting to represent <br>
Customer Service for Personal Classics with a Midlothian, VA P.O. Box <br>
address (Richmond, VA area). The e-mail has a hyperlink to some sort of <br>
on-line automotive community. I have not clicked on it so I don't know <br>
what it actually links to. The e-mail is full of poor grammar and <br>
misspellings. The listed URL for Personal Classics appears not to exist. <br>
Anybody else received this or has anyone heard of this person or his <br>
organization? I am very suspicious of this e-mail.<br>
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Tom Nichols<br>
'58 TR3A TS32093L O<br>
'86 TVR 280i<br>
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