Sophisticated Fraud

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http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/fraud-warning-card-scam-nets-111508551.html

Fraud warning: new card scam nets £1m in four months

By Rosie Murray-West | Telegraph – 1 hour 50 minutes ago
Bank customers are falling victim to a new and sophisticated type of credit card fraud which has increased threefold since the beginning of the year.

Victims are telephoned by fraudsters and duped into revealing their PIN and then handing over their bank card to a courier in this new form of crime, which has seen more than £750,000 taken from customers since the beginning of the year.

The scam involves a person being called by someone claiming to be from their bank. They are told that their debit or credit card needs collecting as it needs replacing following fraud on their account.

The caller often suggests that the person hangs up and calls the bank back if they want to ensure the call is genuine, but stays on the line, tricking the person into thinking they’re calling their bank. The criminal will then ask the person to key in their PIN number, before sending a courier to collect the card. The victim is told the card is going to the bank to be changed but it is actually delivered to the fraudster to use along with the PIN obtained during the scam.

DCI Paul Bernard, head of the Dedicated Cheque and Plastic Crime Unit, said: “Many of us feel confident that we can spot fraudsters but this type of crime can be sophisticated and could happen to anyone. While we have seen an increase in this type of fraud, we know collectively we can stamp it out.

“If you become a victim of this type of crime, you should contact your bank in the first instance. If you have friends or relatives who you feel may be vulnerable to this, please help them to be more aware of the potential risks and what to look out for. Remember, if you are the innocent victim of card fraud you will not suffer any financial loss.”

More than £1.5m has now been lost to this crime, with the same amount £750,000 stolen in the first four months of 2012 that was stolen during the whole of 2011.

The Payments Council found in a survey of account holders that more than three quarters feel confident that they would be able to spot a fraudulent telephone banking call. However, after hearing how the card fraud phone scam works, over half of the 4,000 people surveyed were surprised by how sophisticated it was, one third worried they were more vulnerable than they thought and four fifths felt that anyone could be a potential victim of the fraud.

Mr Bernard said that customers should follow some simple tips to avoid being a victim. These include making sure you can hear the dial tone when you call your bank, and never handing over your card. Your bank or the police will never ring you and tell you that they are coming to your home to pick up your card, so never hand it over to anyone who comes to collect it.

He added that your bank will never ask you to authorise anything by entering your PIN into the telephone. The only times that you should enter your PIN are at a cash machine or when you use a shop’s chip and PIN machine.


Are people really still that dumb that they would fall for most of the methodology behind this scam.
 
Spoke to my Mother recently and she told me about how one of her friends fell for this...Made me cringe on so many levels.

Comical the theories they had dreamt up. "Insider job" at the bank was where i actually guffawed.
 
in this day and age, surely anything bank related will never ask for your pin?! why the hell do people think they need their pin for anything other than at an atm?
 
Did no one say i'll just cut the card up :S?
I'm sure they did, but if you hit one out of a hundred people, it still gives you a few grand from their account.

It's similar story to explain why email spam is so prevalent. When you send out 10,000,000 emails, you only need 100 bites to get a decent return.
 
Its not sophisticated or especially new... certainly not this year new.

It is pretty cunning and will certainly confuse people into thinking they have contacted the bank in a 'safe' way- I guess you could even play a dial tone after the mark has hung up :D
 
Tested my mum out on this one to see her response - "if it was real the bank would ask them to cut up the old card before they sent a new one out not ask you to send it back" :D
 
in this day and age, surely anything bank related will never ask for your pin?! why the hell do people think they need their pin for anything other than at an atm?

Ahh ****, And here is me typing my PIN into those little machines on the counters in shops, no wonder they keep deducting the cost of my shopping from my bank
 
How does this work then ?

"The caller often suggests that the person hangs up and calls the bank back if they want to ensure the call is genuine, but stays on the line, tricking the person into thinking they’re calling their bank"

Incoming calls dont lock the line open as they used to in olden days. You hang up and the call is gone.
 
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