Yorkshire Post

Imposter police stealing savings

- CLAIRE WILDE CRIME CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: claire.wilde@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ClaireWild­eYP

Fraudsters are playing on people’s public-spirited nature to cheat victims out of their life savings, by posing as detectives, a senior officer at a Yorkshire police force has warned.

FRAUDSTERS ARE playing on people’s public-spirited nature to cheat victims out of their life savings, a senior officer at a Yorkshire police force has warned.

The cynical con-artists are posing as the detectives working to bring them to justice, persuading their victims that they can help in a crime-fighting operation if they hand over cash or valuables. And while the sophistica­ted racket has been seen across the country for some time, it has now begun targeting people in North and West Yorkshire.

Detective Inspector Jonathan Rowland, of North Yorkshire Police’s Economic Crime Unit, said there had been seven cases across North Yorkshire in the past two weeks and they suspected the fraudsters would continue to target the area in the weeks to come.

He said colleagues at West Yorkshire Police had also seen two similar cases in recent weeks.

He claimed the scam was “a well-worn path” which had been seen in other parts of the country before, but had never been seen to this extent in North Yorkshire.

He added: “I do not believe that it is people from North Yorkshire. I would expect this to be a national team of fraudsters.

“Wherever they are based, I don’t know, but they seem to be hitting us at the moment.”

The fraud often involves an unsolicite­d telephone call from someone claiming to be a detective at New Scotland Yard or an anti-fraud worker at a high-street bank, claiming to be investigat­ing suspicious activity in the householde­r’s account.

Sometimes, they tell their target to hang up the phone and call 999 but unbeknowns­t to the victim, the team of fraudsters remain on the line and pretend to be police officers answering the phone. The victim is often told that he or she could help to thwart fraudsters by moving money into a different account or handing over cash or valuables to a courier.

Det Insp Rowland said: “They are sophistica­ted. It is nasty because it can take people’s life savings.”

In a case in York last week, a woman in her 70s was persuaded to buy a Rolex watch and hand it over, with cash, to a courier. In total, she was conned out of £40,000.

In another case, in Harrogate, suspicious bank staff alerted the police when a woman in her 80s asked to withdraw £17,000. Det Insp Rowland said, luckily, this meant the woman did not lose her money.

He added: “People are falling victim to this type of fraud because they want to help the police. It is playing on people’s public-spirited nature. They want to help the police because they trust the police.”

He said the fraudsters often targeted elderly people and if they judged someone to be particular­ly trusting or vulnerable, they would attempt to take larger sums from them. North Yorkshire Police is now working with Action Fraud and other forces to establish how many cases were believed to be linked.

The warning comes after the boss of a specialist unit set up to tackle scams against vulnerable people had this week outlined the “massive challenge” facing North Yorkshire, with its large and rapidly rising number of elderly residents. Ruth Andrews, of the North Yorkshire County Council team, said loneliness often made people more vulnerable to scams as they were sometimes desperate for someone to talk to.

It is nasty because it can take people’s life savings.

Det Insp Jonathan Rowland, of North Yorkshire Police.

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