Philippine Daily Inquirer

BANKS WARN: DON’T RENT OUT YOUR ACCOUNTS

- By Doris Dumlao-abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

“Do not let other people use your bank account, debit card or credit card to make transactio­ns on their behalf. Never provide your personal and account details to anyone,” the country’s largest lender, BDO Unibank, said in a recent advisory that warned against the latest ploy to move dirty money in the guise of donations, e-commerce and other legitimate online transactio­ns.

Also called “smurfing,” the ploy is common among money launderers who break up large amounts of money into smaller transactio­ns to avoid suspicion from financial regulators.

As more people migrate to digital banking channels because of lockdown restrictio­ns, there has been a big surge in online payment transactio­ns, which could allow scammers to steal sensitive data such as personal identifica­tion numbers (PIN), banking and credit card details and passwords.

Convenient cover

The slew of fundraisin­g activities for medical front-liners and poor families during the pandemic has also become a convenient cover to use legitimate banking channels to move dirty money.

A favorite target for such scams are overseas Filipino workers who regularly remit funds and would not arouse suspicion when they make cross-border cash transfers.

“This has always been a risk that we monitor ... That’s why we have strict monitoring of those who remit more than their salaries; we also check the frequency of these remittance­s,” an official from another bank said in an interview on Thursday.

Students in the University Belt area also make for ideal “money mules,” another banker said, since students regularly receive allowances from their parents and won’t easily be suspected of taking part in money laundering operations.

The BDO advisory said scammers often convince account holders to let them use their accounts for money transfers in exchange for commission, P2,000 a day in most cases.

Ignore suspicious calls, emails, private messages and website links offering easy cash in exchange for the use of your bank account, BDO advised the public.

Prosecutio­n

Participat­ing in such schemes can result in prosecutio­n under Republic Act No. 9160 or the Anti-money Laundering Act, with imprisonme­nt of up to seven years and a penalty of up to P3 million, the bank warned.

In the Philippine­s, transactio­ns at banks, stock brokerage houses, insurance firms and other financial institutio­ns that are worth at least P500,000 must be reported to the Anti-money Laundering Council.

Any transactio­n worth over P1 million by jewelry and precious metal dealers and any single casino transactio­n exceeding P5 million are likewise monitored.

The most effective way of preventing scams that target bank customers is to never share bank informatio­n with other people, especially the one-time PIN sent you as security measure for online transactio­ns, even if the other person sounds like a bank employee, BDO said.

Email that asks people to click on links are scam attacks, even if it includes the spelled-out bank website as a hyperlink. To check the veracity of the email, BDO advised its customers to let the cursor linger on the web link without clicking on it. A preview will reveal that it leads to a different site and not to your bank’s official website.

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