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" ScamHaters United .. Visit us also on Facebook and Instagram : THE TAKE NOTICE BOARD, WHERE WE EXPLAIN WHY DOCUMENTS ARE FAKES. .. Edward Smith, Ghana Inheritance Scam

Scam Haters United

Tuesday, 6 January 2026

THE TAKE NOTICE BOARD, WHERE WE EXPLAIN WHY DOCUMENTS ARE FAKES. .. Edward Smith, Ghana Inheritance Scam

THE 419 SCAM (ADVANCE FEE FRAUD) 
Edward Smith is Dead scam. 

EDWARD SMITH.... GHANA INHERITANCE SCAM. 
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Fundamental Contradiction in Jurisdiction
Ghana's Births and Deaths Registry only registers deaths that occur withinGhana.

Official law (Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1965 (Act 301), states that deaths must happen in Ghana to be registered there.

The document itself includes a note: "Death occurred outside the boundaries of Ghana. New York City, USA."
This directly contradicts the registry's mandate — Ghana has no authority to issue an official death certificate for a death in New York, USA

Cause of Death Listed as "N/A"
Official Ghanaian death certificates require a certified cause of death, usually from a medical practitioner or coroner. "N/A" is not acceptable.

Inconsistencies in Personal Details  The deceased is described as an "Old Miner" residing in Accra, who died in a Ghanaian military hospital — but also supposedly died in New York!! 
No public records or obituaries match an "Edward Smith" dying in 2009.

The layout has handwritten entries mixed with printed text in a way that's common in low-quality forgeries.

Common Scam Context
Fake Ghanaian death certificates are frequently used in inheritance/gold scams (e.g., claiming a deceased person left assets like gold bars in Ghana, requiring the victim to pay fees).
Scammers often produce documents showing a foreigner (common U.S./European name like "Edward Smith") dying in or connected to Ghana to facilitate "asset recovery."
The "Old Miner" occupation ties into classic Ghanaian gold mining scams.

Conclusion,This document is a poorly made fake. 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This document is a classic example of an advance-fee inheritance scam, commonly known as a 419 scam.

EDWARD SMITH IS DEAD SCAM

It is certainly fraudulent and not a legitimate legal will.Key
Red Flags

"Amal Hassan & Associates Chamber" at "Foch 126 Foch Street Downtown Beirut, Beirut Lebanon" does not appear to be a real law firm. No matches for "Amal Hassan & Associates Chamber." No listings on Lebanese Bar Association directories or credible legal databases exist for this name or solicitor "Barr. Amal Hassan."

Generic and Clipart Design: The header features basic scales of justice icons and a large red seal at the bottom — these are common stock clipart elements used in fake documents. Real notarized Lebanese legal papers would have official notary seals, stamps, and formatting specific to Lebanese law, not generic graphics.

Implausible Story: The will claims Edward Smith (a very common name) is leaving $8,800,000 deposited in a nonexistent "China Commercial Bank Accra, Ghana" to his "adopted daughter" Anita Smith (account N-154-1596733). Ghana Commercial Bank (GCB Bank) is real, but there is no "China Commercial Bank" in Accra. The mixing of Lebanon (law firm) and Ghana (bank) is a frequent tactic in West African-origin scams to confuse victims and evade tracing.

Poor Language and Errors: The text has awkward phrasing (e.g., "eight million eight hundred thousand dollars ($8,800,000.00) deposited", repetitive "Accra" in the bank name, odd witness declarations). Legitimate wills from professional solicitors are precisely drafted.


Scam Pattern Match: This fits the exact template of inheritance scams where a "lawyer" contacts someone claiming they are the beneficiary (or shares a surname with the deceased), provides a fake will, and later demands upfront fees for "transfer taxes," "legal costs," or "bank release fees" to access the money. Once paid, the scammers disappear or ask for more. Variations often involve Ghana/Nigeria banks and Middle Eastern/European "law firms" for plausibility.
~~~



 

THE EDWARD SMITH IS DEAD SCAM.
Other names also used


This document is a fake and part of a classic advance fee fraud scam (also known as a 419 scam), commonly associated with fraudsters purporting to operate from Ghana or Nigeria.Key

Reasons It's FakeOutdated and incorrect bank details — The bank is now officially called GCB Bank PLC (rebranded years ago), not "Ghana Commercial Bank." The address listed ("Ground Floor GCB Tower Kwaame Nkrumah Ave.") does not match the current head office (No. 2 Thorpe Road/High Street, Accra). The official website is www.gcb.com.gh or www.gcbbank.com.gh.

Old logo and design → The logo shown is an outdated version; the current GCB logo features a stylized amber eagle on a different background.

Suspicious content → Real banks do not issue "certificates" like this for massive deposits ($4.8 million USD) tied to a "next of kin" claim, especially dated back to 2007. This is a common tactic in inheritance/deceased depositor scams where fraudsters later demand "fees" (taxes, legal costs, release charges) to access the funds.

Red flags from experts → U.S. Embassy in Ghana, trade.gov warnings, and Bank of Ghana alerts repeatedly highlight forged bank documents from Ghanaian banks (including GCB) used in advance fee schemes. Victims receive "official-looking" certificates to build trust, then pay escalating fees.

No real person match → While a real former executive named Samuel Sarpong existed at GCB (in roles like Chief Transformation Officer years ago), he is not currently a "Remittance Director," and scammers often misuse real names.

Advice
Do not contact anyone claiming to represent this certificate, respond to related emails, or pay any fees. These scams aim to extract money gradually.
This is 100% fraudulent — legitimate large deposits or inheritances through banks do not work this way.

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