Sunderland Echo

£32m fraud prevented by bank staff and police in just 6 months

Scams halted by UK-wide rapid response scheme after staff are trained to spot the warning signs

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Some £32 million worth of fraud was prevented in the first half of this year due to branch staff at banks, building societies and post offices working with the police.

The scams were stopped through a UK-wide rapid response scheme called the banking protocol.

The latest total is a 65% increase compared with the same period last year and brings the total amount of fraud prevented to £174 million since the scheme was introduced in 2016.

The protocol was launched by UK Finance, National Trading Standards and local police forces.

Branch staff are trained to spot the warning signs that suggest a customer may be falling victim to a scam, before alerting their local police force to step in.

Customers are offered ongoing support, including referrals to social services, expert fraud prevention advice and additional checks on future transactio­ns.

Scams stopped include: ■ A woman tried to send an online payment of £2,500 to the United States. When the payment was blocked, she visited her local bank branch. She said she had been exchanging messages with a friend on social media and they had asked for the money to pay their hospital fees. No money was lost.

■ A woman in her 80s was phoned by a man claiming to be from her bank. He claimed there was an issue with her account and she needed to withdraw £2,000. Branch staff refused the withdrawal as it was a scam and the bank put measures in place to safeguard the victim.

■ A woman in her 80s was quoted £1,500 by builders who said they had been working on her neighbour’s roof and noticed that her roof also needed repairing. At her local bank, the victim explained to bank staff what the money was for – which made staff concerned it was a scam. Police attended and ensured no suspects were still on the scene. Officers also spoke to neighbours. A fraud caseworker has offered her ongoing support.

Meanwhile, the latest figures reveal that branch staff invoked the banking protocol 4,782 times between January and June 2021, saving potential victims an average of £6,672 each.

Ultimately, it led to the arrest of more than 90 suspected criminals, bringing the total number of arrests to 934 since the protocol started.

Katy Worobec, managing director of economic crime, UK Finance, said the scheme also stops stolen money from going on to fund other illicit activities including drug smuggling, human-traffickin­g and terrorism. She said: “Criminals have continued to capitalise on the pandemic to commit fraud, callously targeting victims through impersonat­ion, romance, courier and rogue trader scams.

“Branch staff and the police are working on the front line to protect people from fraud and these figures highlight the importance of their work in stopping these cruel scams and bringing the criminals to justice.”

Temporary Commander Clinton Blackburn, from the City of London Police, said: “The banking protocol continues to be one of the most vital ways of protecting vulnerable victims and preventing criminals from taking advantage of them, as banks are often the first point of contact when someone is about to fall victim to fraud.”

Tom Selby, head of retirement policy at AJ Bell said the figures suggest “improved training for branch staff is helping protect savers from the scourge of scams”.

He continued: “This also likely reflects the fact scammers have been ramping up their attempts to steal money from savers during lockdown. It was depressing but inevitable that criminals would see the pandemic as an opportunit­y to line their pockets, with figures from the Financial Conduct Authority pointing to a surge in financial vulnerabil­ity over the last 12 months.”

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