Media
Release
Robert
E. Casey Jr., Special Agent In Charge, Dallas, FBI,
advises due to the recent increase in frequency and
variety of internet, mail, e-mail, and telephone scams,
the FBI provides the following information and recommendations:
Fraudulent
telemarketing scams are estimated to cost over 40
billion dollars a
year. The Department of Justice estimates the number
of American consumers
defrauded each year by fraudulent telemarketing at
one in six. Fraudulent
telemarketers are continuing to target elderly citizens
in disproportionate numbers.
Some
of the more common scams that continue to be a concern
include:
a) Nigerian Letters;
b) Lottery/Sweepstakes Scams;
c) Internet Auction Fraud.
NIGERIAN
LETTERS
Individuals
and businesses continue to receive letters from Nigeria
through the
mail, over fax machines, and over e-mail. These letters
appear to come from a
prominent individual or company with access to a substantial
sum of money. The
writer purports to need someone with a bank account
outside Nigeria to facilitate
recovery of this large sum of money. These Nigerian
scam letters have been going
around for years and there are now numerous versions
which may appear to originate
from outside Nigeria. Do not provide bank account
information, or other personal
information based upon these letters.
LOTTERY/SWEEPSTAKES
SCAMS
This
scam involves the victim receiving notification, either
by telephone, mail, or e-mail,
that the victim has won a large sum of money, typically
from Canada, although they
may originate elsewhere. The victim is then convinced
to pay money, under the guise
of customs taxes, processing fees, or as a fee to
convert the winnings to United States
currency, as a prerequisite to receiving the winnings.
Do not send money as a condition
of receiving lottery or sweepstakes winnings. It is
a violation of Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) trade rules to require a purchase
as a condition of entering a contest,
sweepstakes, or other promotion. Also, it is illegal
to play a foreign lottery through the
mail or on the telephone or internet (Title 18 United
States Code, section 1301-1307).
INTERNET
AUCTION FRAUD
This
scam involves a "buyer" expressing an interest
in purchasing something,
typically over the internet. The buyer will then send
a check to the victim in an amount
above the purchase price. The buyer explains why the
check is higher than the
purchase price and asks the victim to send the balance
back to the buyer. The victim,
believing the certified check is good, then forwards
the excess money back to the buyer.
The check sent by the buyer is counterfeit and the
buyer has no interest in purchasing
anything. Sellers should be cautious of a buyer who
wants to send a check for an
amount above the purchase price. Sellers should be
cautious of sending merchandise or
money back to the buyer, without first ensuring that
the buyers form of payment is
legitimate.
RED
FLAGS TO WATCH FOR
a)
Pressure: Scammers will often pressure the victim
to act quickly. The
"opportunity" is only available for a limited
time, or the prize will be given to someone
else if not claimed;
b)
Pay Up Front: A scam will often require the victim
to pay money up front in
order to take advantage of the "opportunity."
No legitimate contest requires a winner
to pay money up front to claim the winnings;
c)
Will Not Send Written Information: The scammer will
rarely send written
documentation to the victim, because that provides
the victim time to think about the
situation, as well as provides the victim the means
of checking out the
operation/organization;
d)
Excuses: The scammer will often be unable to answer
legitimate questions
posed by the victim. They will provide excuses rather
than directly address such
questions and concerns. They will even become upset
because the victim is questioning
the caller by threatening to provide the opportunity
to someone else if the victim is not
interested.
DO'S
AND DON'TS
DO
ask for the business/organization name and address
(many will not provide
this information, because it is something that may
be verified);
DO ask for written information. This gives the potential
victim the opportunity
to examine the offer and talk to others about the
offer;
DO talk to family and friends about the situation.
A second opinion is always a
good idea. Something that sounds too good to be true,
normally is;
DO call the Better Business Bureau (BBB) if you are
unfamiliar with a business;
DON'T
pay to receive lottery/contest winnings;
DON'T allow the caller to pressure you to ACT NOW!
DON'T give out bank account numbers, credit card numbers,
or other personal
information to anyone you did not initiate contact
with and you know is a reputable
business.
RESOURCES
Internet
Fraud: All federal internet fraud complaints are centralized
through the
Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). Because internet
fraud is not geographically
limited, a centralized complaint center allows all
related complaints to be connected
and referred to the appropriate agency. Report instances
of internet and email fraud, i.e. international lotteries,
FBI e-mails, sweepstakes, etc., to the Internet Crime
Complaint Center at www.ic3.gov.
Telemarketing
Fraud: Information about current telephone scams is
available at www.ftc.gov/phonefraud. This web site
also provides descriptions of the current types of
telephone scams being used and advice on how and where
to report telephone frauds and scams. Additional information
is available at www.phonebusters.com. This website
is sponsored by the Canadian government in response
to the large number of sweepstakes/lottery scams originating
in Canada over the past several years.
Identity
Theft: The FTC also offers a separate Identity Theft
hotline, to address identity
theft complaints: 1-877-ID-THEFT (877-438-4338) www.consumer.gov/idtheft
Visit
the FBI.GOV website for the latest information on
e-mail scams and warnings. Within the FBI.GOV website
is a section titled "Be Crime Smart". "Be
Crime Smart" provides information on new e-mail
scams and warnings; reporting internet crime; common
fraud schemes; looks to good to be true scams; and
more tips and suggestions to avoid being a victim
of a scam.
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