The Denver Post

MONEY MULE SCHEMES GROW

- By Nathaniel Popper

After the fitness center where Denise Newton worked closed down in April because of the coronaviru­s, she posted her résumé online to look for a new job. She soon got a call from a company she had never heard of.

The woman who phoned from the company, Heies, invited Newton to apply for a job as a “local hub inspector.” When she started work in May, Newton began receiving boxes with Apple Watches and laptops in them. Her job was to open the boxes, check the contents and then mail them off to foreign addresses.

But something was off. The boxes were suspicious­ly plain, even though they included brand- name products. The name on the labels was never Newton’s. When she asked questions, her new employer stopped responding. In June, she reported Heies to the Better Business Bureau.

It turned out that Newton had become what is known in security circles as a money mule, an accomplice who, either knowingly or unknowingl­y, helps internatio­nal criminal rings move their ill- gotten gains. In Newton’s case, swindlers appeared to be buying products in the United States with stolen money and then mailing them — using unwitting intermedia­ries such as her to disguise their involvemen­t — to overseas locations where the goods could be resold for cash.

“They really caught me at the perfect time,” said Newton, 24, who was living with her parents in Birmingham, Ala. “I was just one of those desperate people looking for a job.”

Since the pandemic’s onset in March, the number of criminal schemes relying on money mules has spiked, just when many people have lost their jobs and are vulnerable to exploitati­on. The volume of schemes has been turbocharg­ed partly by criminals going after enticing pots of money from the U. S. government — specifical­ly, the benefit programs that were set up to help people and businesses hurt by the pandemic- induced economic downturn, authoritie­s said.

In total, online human resources schemes where criminals pose as potential employers have soared 295% from a year ago, while schemes used for money laundering have skyrockete­d by 609%, according to security firm ZeroFox.

Many people who perpetrate these frauds are based overseas, authoritie­s said, so they need to move the money to their home country. Banks and authoritie­s have made it harder to launder money through traditiona­l financial channels in recent years. So these criminals are now increasing­ly on the hunt for a larger supply of potential money mules just as many newly unemployed people look for work.

“It is something that is escalating because of the current environmen­t,” said Robert Villanueva, a former Secret Service agent who now works on cybercrime intelligen­ce for the security firm Q6 Cyber. “It has become hard to avoid.”

Money mules are not new, and their numbers have risen alongside online fraud more broadly over the last two decades. Some people enter the business knowing it is illegal. Advertisem­ents looking for money mules on the so- called darknet, an anonymous corner of the internet popular with criminals, often acknowledg­e the illegal aspect of the work.

“Hi. I need an excellent profession­al bank accounts loader for long term business,” read one ad from

May, which was turned up by darknet research firm Flashpoint.

Yet seven people who became money mules during the pandemic told The New York Times that they had no inkling of what their socalled employer was up to when they began the work. Many had recently lost their jobs and needed to pay the bills. To avoid exposure to the coronaviru­s, they were also looking for jobs to do from home — just what many swindlers want from a money mule.

Alma Sardas, 21, had been furloughed from her job at a hotel in Fort Worth, Texas, this spring when she saw a listing on jobs site ZipRecruit­er advertisin­g a work- from- home position as a “virtual assistant” to a businessma­n in Hong Kong.

Sardas sat through a formal interview and spoke with a man who called himself Hermann Ziegler, who said he would be her boss. Once she was hired, she was sent a check for $ 4,590 to deposit into her bank account. She was told to use some of the money for her expenses and to send the rest from her account to her new employer’s vendors.

Sardas became skeptical about why the money would need to go through her bank account and called local police. They explained that she had almost been caught in a classic money- laundering scheme.

She shredded the check and quickly reported the incident to ZipRecruit­er. ZipRecruit­er said it removed the job posting immediatel­y.

The schemes using money mules are varied. Some people who become mules are victims of online romance frauds who make bank and wire transfers for people they believe care about them. Others, such as Sardas, are asked to use their own bank accounts to make financial transactio­ns on behalf of their new employers. Newton became embroiled in what is known as a reshipping scheme, where the fraudsters buy goods with their stolen money and then use mules to get the products overseas, where they can be resold.

Apart from Apple Watches and laptops, Newton said, she was also sent odd items, including a pack of sponges and a garbage disposal.

By the time Newton reported Heies to the Better Business Bureau, the numbers and emails that the company had used were dead. Its website had also been taken down.

The perpetrato­rs, who have faced other online complaints, have not been caught.

“I feel scared that I have blood on my hands because I’m in the middle of a scam and I’m also in the middle of a pandemic,” Newton said. “They pretty much just took advantage of my vulnerabil­ity.”

 ?? © The New York Times Co. Wes Frazer, ?? Denise Newton, pictured in August in Birmingham, Ala., was contacted by a company called Heies this year after she lost her job. Newton accidental­ly became a money mule, an accomplice who, either knowingly or unknowingl­y, helps internatio­nal criminal rings move their ill- gotten gains.
© The New York Times Co. Wes Frazer, Denise Newton, pictured in August in Birmingham, Ala., was contacted by a company called Heies this year after she lost her job. Newton accidental­ly became a money mule, an accomplice who, either knowingly or unknowingl­y, helps internatio­nal criminal rings move their ill- gotten gains.

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