Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Don’t get caught out by impersonat­ion fraud

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A bank has warned people to be on the alert for scammers as cases of impersonat­ion fraud surge.

TSB said the average victim of impersonat­ion fraud loses £4,000, with household names like Royal Mail, Amazon and BT being used to lure unsuspecti­ng people into sending money to scammers.

Paul Davis, director of fraud prevention at TSB, said: “Households are bombarded with scam calls, texts and emails every day.

“We’re urging them to remain suspicious of any unsolicite­d contact, to avoid falling victim to fraud at a time when the impact would be hardest felt.”

In impersonat­ion fraud cases, a criminal impersonat­es a company, business, organisati­on or individual as a key component, and reported cases have soared by 300% since 2019.

New industry figures from Action Fraud showed there had been more than £2bn worth of reported fraud in less than a year, while TSB said that in 2021 more than half of customers’ transactio­ns to fraudsters were due to impersonat­ion fraud.

TSB found more than half of money lost due to impersonat­ion fraud was from criminals pretending to be from a bank, who claimed the victim’s account was under attack and money had to be transferre­d to a “safe account”.

Authority fraud, when imposters claim to be from official organisati­ons like the police, HMRC, the National Crime Agency or the NHS, made up 13% of the total value lost.

Tech support and phone provider fraud made up 9% of losses, TSB’s analysis of customer data found, with BT, Virgin and Sky used most, when fraudsters pretend to offer speed increases or help with software.

Of the total loss, 8% was from swindlers pretending to be from delivery companies, and 7% from people pretending to be from Amazon.

Paul said people should be suspicious of any out-of-the-blue contact, keep

guard up: Any contact

out of the blue should make you suspicious their guard up and not be easily convinced. He added that fraudsters thrive on causing panic, so people should take their time and the best way to deal with anything suspect would be to hang up or delete the message.

Bank fraud department­s will never ask you to make a transfer, and by dialling 159, people can find out if it really is their bank calling.

TSB is also warning of fraudsters sending emotive texts or email requests for financial help, while posing as a relative or friend. On average, the bank said, family and friend fraud leads to more than £1,200 lost per case.

The bank has now launched its Tackling Fraud Together report and will set out the steps needed to stop fraud to Parliament.

Phil Andrew, chief executive of StepChange, a debt charity which contribute­d to the report, said: “In tough times fraud and financial difficulty go hand in hand.

“The pandemic has left many households with little or no ability to cope with financial shocks and, as costof-living increases start to bite, it’s vital consumers are protected from those seeking to exploit financial and other vulnerabil­ities.”

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