While I have no data to support the claim, I suspect that most victims of Sweepstakes fraud get scammed once and that's the end of it. When they realize they haven't won millions, and that a package containing their prize check will never arrive, they stop paying bogus fees.
Sadly, a small group of victims become cash cows who can't stop giving milk. For these individuals the impulse to pay becomes so strong that it morphs into a compulsion I call "Scambling."
Though technically not gambling (gamblers at least have a chance to win, and their behavior is occasionally reinforced by payoffs), the parallels between Scambling and compulsive gambling are striking.
Take, for example, my father's irresistible urge to send cash to the con men, which bears all of the hallmarks of compulsive gambling, namely:
- Large losses
- Denial
- Lack of impulse control
- Overestimation of the odds of winning
- Clandestine activity (secret phone calls, and money transfers on the sly)
- Disregard for the harm losing does themselves and others
- Belief that they'll be vindicated, when they hit the jackpot
To me, nothing comes close to explaining my father's behavior as well as does addiction. What but an addiction would you call it, if a loved one sent money eighty-six times, to twenty-five strangers, in three different countries, with a hundred different phone numbers, and thirty different aliases?
Whatever it is, I sure as hell wouldn't call it a sweepstakes.
Whatever it is, I sure as hell wouldn't call it a sweepstakes.