I don't know about the rest of you guys but I get these all the time. Most get filtered out with my spam filter but some still get through. This is a new one that I've not seen before.
Have any of you noticed that a lot of these e-mail scams use crazy fonts in the subject line? You can tell it's BS before you even open it. Some of them have blatant misspellings and they're easy to identify. One would think that if you're trying to rip someone off that you'd make the e-mail in question as realistic as possible, right?
Here's the new one I mentioned. It appears to come from the USPS.
Dear Customer ,
We're sorry to let you know that your package which arrived on 03/27/2021 will be sent back ,
This may happen when the address is incorrect.
To place a re-delivery request for this package, please fill out the form on our website.
Check This Now <=====(this was a link in the e-mail to click on in order to 'fix' the issue. When moused over it had some really crazy URL)
NOTICE: Please note, that if a redelivery is not scheduled within 48 hours, you can't submit a redelivery request again. The shipping and handling fees will not be refunded.
If the Post Office received a package for me but the address was wrong, would they contact me and tell me that the address was wrong and then return the package to sender? Or, since they know that it's for me, would they just deliver the package to what they know to be my address? Scammers aren't all that logical.