The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vaccine scams on rise, say officials

Fraudsters tap frustratio­n of many Georgians trying for appointmen­ts.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com

COVID-19 vaccine scams are easy to find on the internet, says Georgia State University professor David Maimon, who specialize­s in researchin­g cybercrime­s.

One person said he could send 60 vials of any vaccine at a “discount” price of about $80 per vial, although the vaccines are not supposed to be sold for private use. Others offer to sell COVID19 vaccinatio­n cards with a U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention letterhead at the top. For $250, another person offered to not only provide a vaccinatio­n card but also register false informatio­n in a government vaccinatio­n database.

Many Georgians have had trouble setting up COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­ts, and scammers are increasing­ly trying to take advantage. State authoritie­s, consumer watchdog groups and pharmaceut­ical companies all say they’re seeing an increase in vaccine scams.

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said during a webinar last

week his office is seeing people offering to mail doses, people seeking payments to set up vaccine appointmen­ts and other fraudulent activity.

Pfizer has spotted websites designed to look like the pharmaceut­ical company’s trying to collect personal informatio­n from vaccine recipients, company official Lev Kubiak said during the webinar. The company has also observed counterfei­t vaccines being used worldwide, he said.

“We worry about any criminal activity associated with the vaccine or related to the vaccine because it just shakes that confidence that people have about vaccines,” said Kubiak, Pfizer’s chief security officer.

Consumers are falling for other types of vaccine schemes as well. The IRS has warned about solicitati­ons to invest in companies developing vaccines.

In an alert posted in March, the Better Business Bureau warned about text messages from someone claiming to be from Pfizer and offering cash or a free product in exchange for filling out a survey about its vaccine. Victims say they entered their credit card informatio­n to pay what they thought was a shipping fee. Instead, the scammers billed them many times more and never sent a product.

“In other versions, the form is actually a phishing scam that requests banking and credit card informatio­n,” the bureau says on its website.

In all, the bureau has received more than 2,100 complaints related to COVID19 since February 2020, according to spokeswoma­n Simone Williams. More than 60 were reported by Georgians, she said.

From the early days of the pandemic to now, many complaints focused on counterfei­t PPE, such as masks, and on claims that various products could prevent, treat or cure COVID-19. Unproven claims also have been a target of federal agencies.

In January, a federal court prohibited several companies operated by Matthew Ryncarz of Alpharetta from selling unapproved vitamin D products touted as treatments for COVID-19.

Now, the bulk of complaints are related to vaccines.

Maimon, who directs Georgia State’s Evidence-based Cybersecur­ity Research Group, last year received federal funding to track online COVID-19 schemes and report findings to authoritie­s.

He and the Georgia State team search the dark web for scammers.

Some, though, are out in the open, using ebay and other popular sites.

Maimon recalled one person contacting him several times about striking a deal to sell supposed vaccine doses.

“He was very pushy trying to sell me the product,” Maimon said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States