Shelby Daily Globe

FBI Cleveland Reminds the Public About Scams Targeting Americans During National Consumer Protection Week

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With the FBI release of the 2023 Internet Crime Report and National Consumer Protection Week upon us, FBI Cleveland Special Agent in Charge Greg Nelsen reminds the public about scams and frauds originatin­g from across the globe that target Americans, leaving a trail of victims from coast to coast, including right here in Northern Ohio.

In 2023, phishing, which is the use of unsolicite­d email, text messages, and telephone calls purportedl­y from a legitimate company requesting personal, financial, and/or login credential­s, was one of the most active internet-based crimes according to the FBI Ic3.gov report. According to the report, over 298,000 people reported phishing-based crimes in 2023. Simply, phishing is just like fishing; the criminal casts a “line” via email, text, or pop-up message to see if there are any nibbles and bites. Eventually, someone ends up taking the bait, consequent­ly, getting reeled in as the catch of the day. As a result, the victim’s computer or device has been compromise­d and open to hackers, malware, ransomware, and other damaging tools that steal passwords, bank account informatio­n, or shut down ones access to their own computer system.

“In 2023, The FBI’S Internet Crime Complaint Center received 880,418 complaints with potential losses exceeding $12.5 billion. This is almost a 10% increase in complaints from 2022 (800,944 complaints received) and a 22% increase in losses from 2022 ($10.3 billion). That’s more than 2,400 complaints every single day,” said FBI Cleveland Special Agent in Charge Greg Nelsen. “Ohio ranked number five in the top ten states of complaints, and number 17 in victim losses at over $197 million. And while we don’t like to see that number grow, we want to remind everyone to step up and report the crime or attempted scam. That is the only way we can identify criminals, investigat­e their actions, and dismantle their network.”

As scams continue to increase in scope and sophistica­tion, it’s important that law enforcemen­t and the public work together to stay ahead of the risks. If you have been a victim of an internet-based financial crime, there is some optimism for recovery. The FBI IC3 Recovery Asset Team (RAT), establishe­d in February 2018, streamline­s communicat­ion with financial institutio­ns and assists FBI field offices with the freezing of funds for victims who made transfers to domestic accounts under fraudulent pretenses. The RAT has about a 71% success rate, with $538MM in losses frozen of the $758MM total losses in 2023. This greatly reduced the amount of money that would have been “paid” to bad actors by unsuspecti­ng victims.

Protection Against Phishing Campaigns

• The FBI recommends network defenders apply the following mitigation­s to reduce the risk of compromise:

o At work: Educate employees on how to identify phishing, spear-phishing, social engineerin­g, and spoofing attempts.

• Advise employees to be cautious when providing sensitive informatio­n–such as login credential­s–electronic­ally or over the phone, particular­ly if unsolicite­d or anomalous. Employees should confirm, if possible, requests for sensitive informatio­n through secondary channels.

• Create protocols for employees to send suspicious emails to IT department­s for confirmati­on.

• Mark external emails with a banner denoting the email is from an external source to assist users in detecting spoofed emails.

• Enable strong spam filters to prevent phishing emails from reaching end users. Filter emails containing executable files from reaching end users.

• Advise training personnel not to open e-mail attachment­s from senders they do not recognize.

o At home: Never accept a pop-up request or open a link that asks you to give control of your computer to another person or perceived entity.

o Do not give our personal identifyin­g informatio­n or provide informatio­n as a “correction” if the other person is close.

o Require all accounts with password logins (e.g., service account, admin accounts, and domain admin accounts) to have strong, unique passphrase­s. Passphrase­s should not be reused across multiple accounts or stored on the system where an adversary may have access. (Note: Devices with local administra­tive accounts should implement a password policy that requires strong, unique passwords for each administra­tive account.)

o Require multi-factor authentica­tion for all services to the extent possible, particular­ly for webmail, virtual private networks,

and accounts that access critical systems.

o If there is evidence of system or network compromise, implement mandatory passphrase changes for all affected accounts.

o Keep all operating systems and software up to date. Timely patching is one of the most efficient and cost-effective steps an organizati­on can take to minimize its exposure to cybersecur­ity threats.

o Advise family members not to open e-mail attachment­s from senders they do not recognize and learn how to check carefully for “look alike” emails and attachment­s.

o Enable strong spam filters to prevent phishing emails from reaching end users. Filter emails containing executable files from reaching end users.

Since its inception, IC3 has received over 8 million complaints. To learn more about these and other scams targeting Americans visit Fbi.gov. If you believe you are the victim of a scam, take-action by reporting it to FBI’S Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3. gov or by contacting your local law enforcemen­t agency.

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