Herald on Sunday

$50k scam: ‘I’m a mug’

‘Ashamed’ victim has no idea how scammers got into his computer.

- By Jared Savage

An 88-year-old man who had nearly $50,000 siphoned out of his bank accounts has put aside his embarrassm­ent to warn others.

Brian Cotter, who lives in a retirement home in Mt Maunganui, got a phone call just before lunchtime on Friday from someone claiming to work at Spark.

The man warned Cotter thousands of people had been scammed by cyber-ransom attacks in New Zealand and Spark was checking the security of its fibre lines. Unable to understand the supposed Spark technician, Cotter spoke to the man’s supervisor who was a “very smooth operator”.

“They would say, you’ll see a popup window soon — then there was one. I don’t know how the hell they got into my computer. I never handed out any passwords or account numbers or anything,” said Cotter.

Still suspicious, the pensioner tried to call Spark — but was unable to reach an operator. After several hours on the phone, Cotter was fed up and wanted to end the conversati­on.

However, the scammers convinced him to leave the phone and computer on while he visited his neighbour and had dinner.

“They promised to fix up all the bugs and install some free anti-virus software and so on,” said Cotter. “I’m such a mug.” He returned to find between $40,000 and $50,000 siphoned out of his accounts.

“I’m normally so careful. They must have put some sort of spyware on the computer,” said Cotter.

“Some people would be too ashamed to talk about this. And I do

feel shame. But I want to warn all the young people like me.”

Cotter had his bank accounts suspended and will attempt to sort the matter tomorrow.

He asked why he didn’t receive a phone call or text message — known as two-factor authentica­tion — from the banks to verify the transactio­ns.

One was $18,000, another for $12,000.

Although banks often reimburse victims of fraud, they can decline to do so if they believe the customer was negligent. The Banking Ombudsman last week highlighte­d a similar case in Internatio­nal Fraud Awareness Week where the customer and the bank eventually resolved the matter.

“It is, however, a salutary reminder of the increasing sophistica­tion of online scams and to be very suspicious of unsolicite­d calls offering help with banking or security.”

A spokeswoma­n for Spark said there had been an increase in scammers calling people, pretending to be from well-known companies.

“It can be difficult for customers to tell the difference between what’s genuine and fake.”

Spark would never ask for personal details, she said. If someone was suspicious, she had some simple advice: Hang up.

 ?? Andrew Warner ?? Brian Cotter was scammed by callers who said they were from Spark.
Andrew Warner Brian Cotter was scammed by callers who said they were from Spark.

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