Leicester Mercury

Royal Mail alert as con circulates

BID TO DUPE PEOPLE WITH ‘FAILED DELIVERY TEXT MESSAGES

- By FINVOLA DUNPHY finvola.dunphy@reachplc.com @finvoladun­phy

MILLIONS are people are being warned about a new Royal Mail scam which is circulatin­g.

The attempt to dupe the public from scammers, which involves a text message claiming people have had a “failed delivery” has been called “insidious” by Trading Standards officials.

The texts claim that the recipient’s parcel delivery failed and has been returned to a Post Office depot, the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) said.

It contains a link to a fake website created to look exactly like an official Post Office platform.

The website asks the recipient to enter their postcode and personal details, supposedly to identify their closest depot and reorganise the delivery.

The informatio­n requested includes the full name, address, date of birth and phone number, and these details are sent directly to scammers who are able to use them to commit identity fraud.

CTSI said it understood that a victim who submitted their details into the bogus website lost £80,000 after fraudsters were able to access their bank account.

The latest fraud follows a series of related delivery scams which use Royal Mail, DPD, Hermes and other delivery company branding.

CTSI lead officer Katherine Hart said: “This Post Office scam is far more insidious than a similar scam which involved Royal Mail. While the Royal Mail scam explicitly asks for a payment to reorganise a delivery, at no point does this happen in this Post Office version, making the communicat­ion less suspect and potentiall­y more likely to be successful.

“Scammers could use the informatio­n to gain access to bank accounts and other important personal accounts. With the pandemic leading to a significan­t rise in online deliveries, it is vital the message about the potential dangers of these scams are shared as far and as wide as possible, especially during this Scams Awareness Fortnight.”

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