Belfast Telegraph

PSNI’s warning as woman duped out of thousands in online swindle

- BY DAVID YOUNG

A NORTHERN Ireland woman has lost tens of thousands of pounds to an online scammer who promised her a cut of a phoney gold deal.

The money paid out by the woman across an extended period amounted to most of her life savings, a senior police officer revealed.

PSNI Chief Superinten­dent Simon Walls said the scam was part of a recent flurry that have used Facebook and Google Hangouts to target people in the region.

“The consequenc­e for that person is they have lost tens of thou-

Plea: Chief Supt Simon Walls

sands of pounds,” he said. Mr Walls said the scammers reach out to befriend people using the popular communicat­ions platforms.

After cultivatin­g a relationsh­ip, they ultimately ask their targets to invest in their attempt to move either diamonds or gold out of a foreign country, with the promise of a percentage of the haul’s value.

He said the local victim felt she had developed a real friendship with the criminal.

“In this case the money was provided over a period of time. We are talking about significan­t amounts of money,” said the officer.

“This person lost most of their life savings.”

Mr Walls heads the PSNI’s efforts to tackle scams — whether they be online, by phone, mail or face-to-face cold callers.

He said in recent times the majority of new reported fraud types were online-based.

The officer said criminals were exploiting the fact people were now used to the concept of making friends with people they had never met before.

“So many of us are online, so many have social media apps on our phone, so many are comfortabl­e with that type of interactio­n with people,” he said.

“It’s communicat­ion with people from a distance and at a distance and this is the way this is happening.”

Mr Walls urged people to adopt a “healthy paranoia” with any unsolicite­d approach made to them.

“If you don’t engage, if you don’t get drawn in, you are not going to lose your savings, you are not going to have your account compromise­d and go through the trauma of all that,” he said.

Mr Walls said other recent scams reported in Northern Ireland include bogus emails purporting to be from Apple informing people that their account has been locked and asking them to click on a link to re-access it.

The link is instead a phishing device to extract informatio­n from computers.

“We certainly have seen no letup in the amount of scams taking place,” the chief superinten­dent added.

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