The Sunday Post (Inverness)

SCOTLAND’S £64M TEXT ROBBERY

Fraud investigat­ors reveal the huge scale of crimewave deploying a battery of phone scams designed to fool stay-at-home Scots

- By Russell Blackstock rblackstoc­k@sundaypost.com

Fraudsters’ haul from deluge of scam messages:

The scale of Scotland’s great text robbery can be revealed today as experts detail how fraud gangs behind a flood of fake messages have stolen £64 million during the pandemic.

It is believed that more than half of people in the country have been targeted by text scams since lockdowns began in March 2020. People now receive up to four scam messages or more every week.

The messages are commonly used to steal a victim’s personal and bank details by getting them to follow a link to a fake version of a trusted website. Police Scotland figures show that reports of fraud have risen dramatical­ly in the past 16 months, as crooks targeted people working from home, on furlough, or shopping online.

Consumer advice groups and government agencies say they are increasing­ly alarmed by record numbers of victims contacting them about being scammed by text and phone.

“We believe more than £86m has been lost to fraudsters in Scotland during the pandemic,” said Katherine Hart, lead officer at the Chartered Trading Standards Institute. “About 75% of these scams have originated from mobile phones. That is about £64m.

“The scammers are becoming ever more sophistica­ted and ruthless. The recent surge in these scams is like an epidemic in itself.”

The criminals behind the texts and calls pretend to be from government agencies, such as HMRC, the DVLA and the NHS. They can impersonat­e major banks and also pretend to be from delivery companies such as Amazon and DPD or Royal Mail.

Hart, who sits on a national scams taskforce, said she almost fell for the latest Royal Mail text fraud herself because she was expecting a delivery. “I received a message saying there was a parcel waiting for me at a local Post Office and I was asked for some details of my address,” she said.

“I had started to use their convincing looking postcode finder when I realised what I was doing and I stopped. If someone like me can almost be taken in, what chance have most other people got?

“What is so clever about this new scam is it doesn’t ask for money, so people think it must be genuine. However, once these crooks have basic informatio­n about someone, they will sell this on to other criminals and a few weeks later they will use this informatio­n to try to defraud you. I know of a woman in her 60s from Angus who was recently conned out of £60,000 after she simply answered a text and then followed a link to a cloned bank website.

“These scammers are also without a doubt operating in Scotland. We have heard they could be sending out thousands of texts a day from equipment set up in places like Airbnbs, rental properties and industrial units. It is suspected they often employ students or low-paid workers to do it for them.”

Consumer agencies say it is not just older generation­s who are falling for these types of phone scams – younger Scots are now being duped.

“There used to be a stereotype of a vulnerable person in their 80s, who lives alone, and who would be regarded as being a typical victim,” said Colin Mathieson, spokesman for Advice Direct Scotland. “But we are now seeing more and more younger people and profession­als contacting us for help and advice.

“They are often working from home and taking up to 20 calls a day, so it is easy to get distracted and download an app from a text.

“A lot of the younger people are too embarrasse­d to report they have been scammed but the distress and financial loss this can cause to people of any age is significan­t.”

According to Jemiel

Benison, who leads on scams for Citizens Advice Scotland, there is still a perception that fake texts and calls are more of a nuisance than a crime – but the reality for victims is very different.

“Some people think scams are harmless, even funny,” he said. “I have been asked things like, ‘Don’t you ever admire them?’.

“Well, no I don’t. I’ve sat across the table from too many scam victims, crying, or bursting with anger and frustratio­n. The thing is, the financial loss is just one effect of a scam. It knocks your selfconfid­ence. And there’s a sense of shock, that someone has deliberate­ly set out to defraud you.”

During the pandemic, Neighbourh­ood Watch Scotland has been focused on alerting people about phone and texts scams. National co-ordinator William Clark

said: “They are sophistica­ted and changing almost daily. It is hard to keep up with them. The amount of informatio­n people can hand over in a click is frightenin­g.”

E-commerce has boomed during lockdowns, making fake deliveries rich pickings for scammers. The texts usually claim a package has missed its delivery slot or requires a fee to be paid.

In May, eight men were arrested in Birmingham, Coventry, London and Colchester during dawn raids. The suspects were allegedly involved in sending fake messages, primarily posing as Royal Mail, and asking people to pay a fee to retrieve a parcel.

Security experts believe this is just the tip of the iceberg.

The UK Government’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) provides advice and support for the public and private sector on how to defend against security threats online.

The organisati­on has already taken down hundreds of thousands of online scam campaigns that people are directed to from email and text scams and is working around the clock to stay ahead of the crooks.

The NCSC is also working with businesses such as mobile phone providers and delivery companies to share informatio­n to combat the scourge and has launched a number of initiative­s to support and educate the public.

Kate Sinnott, the NCSC’S head of public engagement, said: “It is important that people report these scams so we can take action to remove them as quickly as possible and stop people from falling victim. We need to fight back together to protect others. We will not let these criminals win.”

The scams are so widespread even entirely new mobile numbers are receiving bogus texts within days of new accounts being opened, research from consumer watchdog Which? has revealed.

Police Scotland said: “We are working closely with partners to deter this kind of scam and make Scotland a hostile environmen­t for scammers.

“We would urge anyone who is worried they may have provided personal or financial informatio­n via a link in a message of this sort to contact their bank or financial provider. If you are concerned a crime has taken place, please contact us.”

Politician­s across the country are demanding action. Shetland MSP Beatrice Wishart has been contacted by constituen­ts concerned about the number of fake texts and calls they are receiving, and she said: “I have been targeted myself.”

Dean Lockhart, MSP for Mid-scotland and Fife, said: “It is imperative the strongest possible message is sent out against these scammers and people are fully aware to not click on these sorts of links.

“There must also be the toughest punishment­s handed down against those who believe it is appropriat­e to carry out these scams.”

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 ??  ?? GOV.UK FRAUD ALERT You are one of thousands of Scots being robbed by sophistica­ted fraudsters using fake texts. More info at gov.gkwertyuio//df//
GOV.UK FRAUD ALERT You are one of thousands of Scots being robbed by sophistica­ted fraudsters using fake texts. More info at gov.gkwertyuio//df//
 ?? Picture Jamie Williamson ?? Katherine Hart, of Chartered Trading Standards Institute, warns potential victims to take care
Picture Jamie Williamson Katherine Hart, of Chartered Trading Standards Institute, warns potential victims to take care

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