Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Home buyers stand to lose thousands in new cyberattac­k

-

CYBERCRIMI­NALS are hacking the email accounts of Irish solicitors in an attempt to steal tens of thousands of euro from unsuspecti­ng home buyers, the Sunday Independen­t has learned.

The Law Society has confirmed a number of Irishbased legal firms have been subjected to this kind of hightech assault.

Dubbed ‘Friday Afternoon Fraud’, the conveyanci­ng scam has been known to take several forms, but generally occurs when the hackers intercept emails between home buyers or sellers, and their solicitors.

They generate lookalike emails which allow them to pose as the solicitor involved.

During the final stages of a property purchase or sale, they inform potential victims by email that certain bank account details have changed.

They then instruct that payments be moved to a different account, allowing the criminals secure control over deposits.

A solicitor’s own email may be hacked or impersonat­ed, so clients are directed to send money to accounts other than the solicitor’s client account.

Alternativ­ely, the lawyer may receive a telephone call, purportedl­y from the bank’s anti-fraud team, asking for account details and passwords.

They may be told to transfer the contents of an account elsewhere. The criminals then withdraw the money.

The amounts involved can be substantia­l, representi­ng a down payment on a property, or possibly the proceeds of a sale.

The activity typically takes place on a Friday afternoon, when the scammers know client accounts are likely to hold large amounts of cash.

This particular conveyanci­ng scam is currently the number one cybercrime in the UK legal sector.

But it has now been confirmed that conveyanci­ng fraudsters are also targeting Irish firms.

In a statement, the Law Society of Ireland said legal practices here have been subject to similar “attacks”.

While it is believed the number is “small”, the prevalence of such activity is unknown as “exact statistics are not available.”

In order to “protect solicitors against these frauds” the society has launched a new cybersecur­ity section on its website, to advise members on how to protect themselves from cybercrimi­nals.

A recent survey found a near 50pc increase in the number of cyberattac­ks reported by Irish firms in the past year. And three firms out of every 10 have been subject to a cyberattac­k in the past 12 months

Rory O’Neill, an investigat­ing accountant with the society, says the continued integratio­n of technology has “significan­tly increased the risk” of attacks.

He highlighte­d cases in which “external emails” between solicitors and their client have been “intercepte­d” and read by criminals.

“When a genuine email is sent with bank account details enclosed, the fraudster intercepts and amends the details of the bank account. This amended email is then forwarded to the appropriat­e recipient from the spoofed email account.”

If the recipients “act on the emails”, the money will be transferre­d to the fraudulent account.

 ?? Mark O’Regan ?? Dont’ miss today’s Sunday Property section
Mark O’Regan Dont’ miss today’s Sunday Property section

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland