Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

And out come the wolves

Anxiety over disease ignites rush of virus-related scams

- JEREMY ROEBUCK

PHILADELPH­IA — No, chewing garlic pills or drinking colloidal silver won’t help you stave off the coronaviru­s. Legitimate doctors won’t send emails in broken English claiming to have treated your sick relatives and demanding thousands of dollars in return. And no one, state and federal authoritie­s say, should be charging as much as $10 for a roll of toilet paper.

But just as the spread of the coronaviru­s has sparked a collective wave of national anxiety, a litany of price-gougers, snake-oil salesmen, email phishers and scammers is emerging just as quickly to exploit it.

Their tactics are not new, cybersecur­ity and law enforcemen­t experts say. But the nation’s level of concern over a disease that has infected tens of thousands of people in the U.S. and killed more than 200 is.

“The play’s the same, they’ve just changed the scenery,” said Michael Levy, a University of Pennsylvan­ia law professor who formerly led the cybercrime­s unit in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Philadelph­ia. “The idea is to play on fear. When we’re afraid, we don’t think with the front part of our brain, and getting people to operate on fear is how they operate.”

That’s made some people more susceptibl­e to scams shilling virus-preventing air duct cleanings, urgent emails with dodgy links to malware-infected apps, and hucksters hawking special toothpaste­s online that they claim can curb the virus’ spread.

“We’re seeing just an explosion of scams on a level that we have not seen in relation to one event before,” said Scott Brady, U.S. attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvan­ia, who announced the formation Thursday of a coronaviru­s task force to crack down on fraud. Since his task force’s hotline launched it already has received complaints about email phishing scams targeting municipal government offices and another bearing a Fox News logo with links purporting to lead to the latest coverage of the virus.

Homeland Security officials in New Jersey let the air out of one particular­ly persistent fraud Friday — a text message making the rounds all week that claims the sender has “military friends” with inside informatio­n that President Donald Trump would announce a nationwide, two-week “mandatory quarantine” within the next 72 hours.

That one caused so much alarm it prompted the typically reserved National Security Council to tweet: “Text message rumors of a national #quarantine are FAKE. There is no national lockdown.”

In the Philadelph­ia region, police in Perkasie, Bucks County, and in Moorestown, Burlington County, warned residents in recent days not to fall prey to potential scammers going door-to-door offering in-home testing for the virus, when no such tests exist. Spokespers­ons for the department­s said they had received no specific reports of this happening in their jurisdicti­ons but issued their warnings in response to chatter on neighborho­od message boards.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro said he’s fielded nearly 1,800 complaints of skyrocketi­ng prices for staple goods to a price-gouging email address he launched Monday. As of Thursday, his office had sent cease-and-desist letters threatenin­g legal action to 39 businesses in Philadelph­ia and its suburbs.

The targets included a chain department store in Bensalem selling hand sanitizer for $20 a bottle, a Bucks County farmers market where a case of water went from $3 to $15 in a few days, and a Philadelph­ia store selling $50 N-95 face masks, a spokespers­on for the attorney general said.

Although not regulated by the same restrictio­ns that apply to tax-paying businesses, a handful of Philadelph­ia-area posters on Facebook’s Marketplac­e feature were hawking essentials in short supply like toilet paper for as much as $100.

“Stock up now,” wrote one Berks County poster shilling Charmin. “Plenty of supply.”

Nationally, cybersecur­ity monitors have warned of email phishers and hackers targeting those newly working from home. Earlier this week, the Secret Service flagged fraudulent software, mimicking remote access tools like VPN designed to insert malware into IT networks through employees working remotely.

And while the ink isn’t even dry on a Senate proposal to issue relief checks to individual Americans as part of a broader stimulus action, the Federal Trade Commission is already warning against scammers seeking Social Security numbers, bank accounts or credit card numbers in order to release the funds.

“It will seem legitimate to people who have heard in the news that those distributi­ons might be coming,” said Jonathan Sasse, marketing executive at First Orion, an Arkansas company that builds scam protection­s for mobile-phone users. “And often times, where scammers are very successful is if they’re dealing with a too-good-tobe-true thing like an offer of funds in times of desperate financial conditions.”

Alex Quilici, CEO of the robocall blocking service YouMail, said his company has reports of recorded messages purporting to offer $400-a-week, work-fromhome jobs with Amazon and cleaning services that claim to shield houses from disease.

That last pitch, recorded and posted to the company’s website, recommends “sanitizing your ducts and air filters to protect your loved ones from the coronaviru­s” — for only $159. A call to the numbers listed in the voice mail was not returned Friday.

Still, law enforcemen­t agencies say adopting a measure of common sense could offer the best immunity to common frauds. They’ve urged people to independen­tly verify companies making coronaviru­s claims and suggested caution with unsolicite­d emails offering informatio­n, supplies, or treatment in exchange for personal informatio­n.

Don’t click on links or open email attachment­s from unknown senders, they’ve warned. And make sure anti-malware and antivirus software is up to date.

In a memo sent to U.S. attorneys nationwide Monday, Attorney General William Barr directed each to appoint a “coronaviru­s coordinato­r” to prioritize disease-related fraud reports.

U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain urged scam victims to call the FBI at 215-4184000.

“Remember,” Shapiro’s office said. “If there is a medical breakthrou­gh, you won’t hear about it for the first time through an email, online ad or unsolicite­d sales pitch.” Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

“The play’s the same, they’ve just changed the scenery. The idea is to play on fear. When we’re afraid, we don’t think with the front part of our brain, and getting people to operate on fear is how they operate.”

— Michael Levy, a University of Pennsylvan­ia law professor who formerly led the cybercrime­s unit in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Philadelph­ia

 ?? (AP/David Goldman) ?? A shopper looks for toilet paper Thursday at a Stop & Shop supermarke­t during hours open daily only for seniors in North Providence, R.I. Federal law enforcemen­t is warning that scam artists are preying on older people’s fears by peddling fake tests for the coronaviru­s to Medicare recipients.
(AP/David Goldman) A shopper looks for toilet paper Thursday at a Stop & Shop supermarke­t during hours open daily only for seniors in North Providence, R.I. Federal law enforcemen­t is warning that scam artists are preying on older people’s fears by peddling fake tests for the coronaviru­s to Medicare recipients.
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