Daily Mail

Bank fraud victims hit for £1.3bn

...and customers face a ‘lottery’ getting a refund

- By Fiona Parker Money Mail Reporter

BANKS have revealed how a record £1.3billion was stolen by scammers last year amid a spiralling fraud epidemic.

Cons in which victims are groomed and manipulate­d into divulging personal details or transferri­ng money were the biggest driver of losses.

Lenders reported a staggering 195,996 examples of so- called ‘authorised’ or ‘push payment’ scams, with britons tricked into handing over £583.2million in 2021. This is a 27 per cent rise in cases and 39 per cent increase in the amount of money stolen compared to the previous 12 months, according to banking trade body Uk Finance.

Crooks use tactics such as scam phone calls, text messages, emails, social media posts and fake websites to target victims. They then pose as trusted organisati­ons such as the police, banks or even relatives to con people into making payments.

savers lost a devastatin­g £171.7 million to criminals offering fraudulent investment opportunit­ies alone – a 57 per cent increase on 2020.

Romance scams in which crooks prey on the vulnerable and lonely were also rife, with total losses soaring by 73 per cent to £30.9million.

On Monday, the Daily Mail revealed how britain is now the fraud capital of the world, with almost £3billion lost every year

This number is higher because it includes all incidents reported to Action Fraud. Uk Finance’s research only includes cases where customers have reported the crime to their bank.

Victims of ‘unauthoris­ed fraud’ – such as where criminals have stolen a card and gone on a spending spree without the owner’s knowledge – are legally entitled to a refund unless they have behaved recklessly.

but there is not the same protection for those who lose money to ‘authorised’ push payment scams. Most major banks are signed up to a code of conduct that requires them to refund blameless fraud victims.

but only around half of push payment scam losses – some £271.2 million – were reimbursed last year. Rocio Concha, of Which? said: ‘All too often victims face a reimbursem­ent lottery depending on who they bank with.’

Myron Jobson, a senior analyst at Interactiv­e Investor, added: ‘Fraudsters wreaked havoc during the pandemic by taking advantage of consumers’ fears and shrouding their nefarious schemes among correspond­ence by the government and legitimate organisati­ons relating to coronaviru­s measures.

‘The worry is history could repeat itself amid the biggest fall in living standards in generation­s.’

The figures also suggested the industry was worse at stopping unauthoris­ed fraud. banks blocked 65.3p of every £1 crooks attempted to steal, down from 67.3p and 68.8p in 2020 and 2019 respective­ly. Uk Finance said this was down to a drop in the number of high-value cheque fraud cases, which previously boosted the figure. It also stressed it had still stopped £1.4billion from falling into the hands of criminals.

katy Worobec, of Uk Finance, said: ‘Fraud has a devastatin­g impact on victims and the money stolen funds serious organised crime, as well as imposing significan­t costs on the wider economy.’

The Mail is calling for police to make tackling scammers a priority and to boost the number of specialist investigat­ors, with a minister for fraud appointed to take overall responsibi­lity.

We are also calling for the reimbursem­ent of fraud victims by banks to be made mandatory, alongside stronger protection for vulnerable customers.

Tech giants should also be forced to compensate victims using their platforms and fined if they fail to protect them.

Have you fallen victim to a scam? Write to us at moneymail@dailymail.co.uk

‘Wreaked havoc during pandemic’

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Headache: Victims face rise in scams by text or social media
Headache: Victims face rise in scams by text or social media

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom