Wednesday, December 28, 2005

In the last few days I’ve received two emails from different young gay men in Russia. This can’t be a coincidence, but I haven’t quite figured out what’s going on yet. Both found me through my profile on gay.com. There are a few different explanations, but so far I have no sense of which is closest to the truth. It could be a scam by someone here posing as young Russian gay men in the hope of extracting money from lonely American gay men with a fondness for Russian boys. (I’m older and have a fondness for Russian boys, though they have no reason to know that. But I’m certainly not lonely.) This seems like a lot of work for a dubious payoff—all of that writing to random people. It doesn’t seem like a good plan for a single scam artist. It could also be a scam by actual Russian boys working separately, trying extract money from the same lonely American men, or a passage to the U.S. somehow. This seems to fit better with the fact that there is much work for a questionable return—the Russian boys are enterprising and have the time to work on easily duped lonely gay men. The third possibility is that gay.com is suddenly expanding into Russia—it is in much of Europe already—or somehow the word has gotten out in Russia about gay.com. This would mean the Russian boys, with their earnest and voluminous emails, are sincere—a notion I’d like to believe but can’t. I’m betting on the second possibility. Here are the facts.

First both boys, on different days within the same week, leave short emails at my gay.com address introducing themselves and wanting me to write back. Both leave email addresses for me to use. One address has a domain with a simple .com extension. The other has an extension of .by (Belarus). I respond to both with very short emails wondering how they found me. (Why little ‘ole me?) Within a day or two both respond to my emails with effusive, lengthy text and an attached photo. First there is Ivan, who, in his opening remark, commented on my “pleasant letter”—it was definitely not pleasant. His English is disjointed (except for places where it reads oddly well) but comprehensible, as if he feed his Russian through a translation program. He apologizes for the poor English, claiming that he studied English for only a few years and going on to mention that although there are translation programs, he was unable to use them. He is writing from an Internet café, for he has no access at home. In his attached photo he is sitting alone at a dark table in a dark room, looking friendly and somewhat handsome, but not exceptional. Ivan is from the city of Kstovo, which is 400 km or so southeast of Moscow and has a population of about 70,000.

Sergey is the second fellow, 25 years old. He claims to be a “consultant.” He is from Ufa, Russia, which is 1200 km east of Moscow, with a population of one million. His photo is better. He is sitting next to a window at a brightly lit restaurant, smiling and eating pizza.

There is no question that both responses are tailored specifically for me, addressing questions I posed in my first email. Both young men claim to be lonely and looking for friends, correspondence or life partners—they seem to be willing to take any of those options. Both say they have many friends but that they are closeted to all but their immediate family. Both speak of the persecution of gays in Russia, and of the difficulties of being gay there, but they don’t belabor the point. It is simply made. Both hope their age difference with me will not be a problem. Both have former relationships lasting a few years, finally terminating with the bf cheating (Sergey) or moving away (Ivan). Neither boy is looking for sex, though they both are clear that they like sex—they both want “stability” and to be loved body and soul.

Both go into agonizing detail about their respective cities. Imagine paragraphs beginning “In the beginning of XV century” and “After reform of 1861.” Both very much want me to write back. Ivan wants me to send a photo. I’ve responded to both. We’ll see what happens.

3 comments:

The O said...

Interesting that it took me about 2.5 years to search around and find someone else who's experienced this very thing!

I have had three identical (to a great degree) "email pals" to what you described. The first one was actually around the time of your blog post. I corresponded with 'Pavel' for a good long while and, like you, found that some of my questions were responded to by him. The correspondence ended when, as I was preparing for a business trip to Munich, I told him so and said that if he wanted to travel to Munich it might be fun to meet. His response was the closest that he ever came to asking for anything of me - mentioning that he couldn't afford the travel, and would have to sell his motorcycle . . .

I don't recall if he asked me for help with the travel, but I did make it clear that I wasn't going to do that. There was no more contact after that.

So, nothing for quite some time, and then about a month ago, another new contact. This time it is Val. Same scenario. However, from the start I challenged him to actually write to *me* and to not send what appeared to be pre-written emails. I think one email from him seemed to be a response to the challenge. and then it went back to long emails of the kind you describe.

I sent one or two responses saying that it was clear that he was not writing to >>me<< and that I wouldn't respond until he did so. Well, after that I have received about three more long emails, all of them starting with something to the effect of "how wonderful I felt when I got your message." That's right - he was responding to messages that I did not send.

So, I wonder how far this odd email thing went with you. Have you heard of any other guys being contacted in a similar way?

Anonymous said...

I recently was contacted by Yuriy from Mari-El in the former Soviet Republic. It has been approximately one month since he found me on Gay.com and I am very thankful that I've researched and found blogs such as yours. I believe that they are becoming more patient, this by drawing out their emails with more detail and not asking too quickly for money or Visa help. The red flags for me was that he's just to damn good looking to be lonely, sob story about no parents and growing up in an orphanage, having to use the internet cafe, everything I've read in my research. I've just yesterday, copied him articles from american posts, regarding russian scams. We usually email everyday and today haven't heard a word! I think I'll reply that I'm coming over and want his address. I think I'll have fun with this for awhile.

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