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SCAM
AWARENESS MONTH - TOP TEN SCAMS TO LOOK OUT FOR
(1 February 2005)
At
the launch of a month-long campaign, the OFT identifies the top
ten scams targeted at UK consumers to alert the public to the swindles
that may part them from their money. UK consumers lose an estimated
£1 billion per year to a variety of scams which exploit low-cost,
mass-marketing techniques to target recipients. Many of these scams
originate from overseas, making detection and prosecution more difficult.
The
OFT has joined forces with law-enforcement agencies in over 30 countries
to tackle scams which originate outside the UK borders. In October
2004, for example, OFT co-operation with partner agencies in the
United States and Canada, such as the FBI and the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, helped lead to over 100 arrests in the US and 35
in other countries for telemarketing scams.
Consumers
need to be on the alert for the following approaches:
- Telephone
lottery scams - These include the Canadian lottery scam and
the El Gordo Spanish lottery scam, which deceptively uses the
name of a genuine lottery. People respond to an unsolicited mailing
or telephone call telling them they are being entered into a prize
draw. They then receive a telephone call congratulating them on
winning a big prize in a national lottery - but before they can
claim their winnings, they must send money to pay for taxes and
processing fees. The prize doesn't exist.
- Prize
draw, sweepstakes and foreign lottery mailings - many typical
scams take the form of prize draws, lotteries or government payouts.
Most appear to be notification of a prize in an overseas draw
or lottery in return for administration or registration fees.
- Premium
rate telephone number scams - Notification by post of a win
in a sweepstake or a holiday offer includes instructions to ring
a premium rate 090 number to claim your prize.
- Investment
related scams - An unsolicited telephone call offering the
opportunity to invest in shares, fine wine, gemstones or other
soon-to-be rare commodities. These investments often carry very
high risk and may be worth a lot less than you pay. The shares
are not quoted on any stock exchange and you will not be able
to sell them easily afterwards.
'Solid' valuable investments, such as gem stones, are often said
to be stored in secretive Swiss bank vaults, so you can never
see your investment.
- Nigerian
advance fee frauds - an offer via letter, email or fax to
share a huge sum of money in return for using the recipient's
bank account to permit the transfer of the money out of the country.
The perpetrators will either use the information given to empty
their victim's bank account; or convince him or her that money
is needed up front for bribing officials.
- Pyramid
schemes - offer a return on a financial investment based upon
the number of new recruits to the scheme. Investors are misled
about the likely returns as there are not enough people to support
the scheme indefinitely - only the people who set up the scheme
are able to make any money.
- Matrix
schemes - are promoted via websites offering expensive hi-tech
gadgets as free gifts in return for spending 20 or similar on
a low-value product such as a mobile telephone signal booster.
Consumers who buy the product join a waiting list to receive their
free gift. The person at the top of the list gets their free gift
only after a prescribed number - sometimes as high as 100 - of
new members join up. In reality, the majority of those on the
list will never receive the expensive item they expect.
- Credit
scams - another advance fee fraud, originating in Canada.
Advertisements have appeared in local newspapers offering fast
loans regardless of credit history. Consumers who respond are
told their loans have been agreed but before the money can be
released they must pay a fee to cover insurance. Once the advance
fee is paid, the consumer never hears from the company again and
the loan never appears.
- Property
investment schemes - would-be investors attend a free presentation
and are persuaded to hand over thousands of pounds to sign up
to a course promising to teach them how to make money dealing
in property. Schemes may involve the opportunity to buy properties
which have yet to be built at a discount. A variation is a buy-to-let
scheme where companies offer to source, renovate and manage properties,
claiming good returns from rental income. In practice, the properties
are near-derelict and the tenants non-existent.
- Work-at-home
and business opportunity scams - often work by advertising
paid work from home but which require money up-front to pay for
materials; or by requiring investment in a business with little
or no chance of success.
Christine
Wade, director of consumer regulation enforcement at the OFT, said:
'Scammers are resourceful, enterprising, and manipulative. By exploiting
the same routes to market as legitimate business, they damage not
only individual consumers, but the interests of fair-trading businesses
as well. We will continue to work with our partners within the UK
and overseas to enforce the law against perpetrators of these misleading
and fraudulent schemes; and to provide the public with the knowledge
and skills they need to recognise these scams.'
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