There has been an increase in Courier Fraud in your local area!
What is Courier Fraud?
Courier Fraud occurs when a criminal contacts a victim by telephone,
purporting to be a police officer or bank official. To substantiate this
claim, the caller might be able to confirm some basic details about the
victim such as their full name and address. They claim there is an issue
with your bank account, they have someone in custody or request your
assistance with an ongoing bank or Police investigation. The ultimate aim
of this call is to convince you into parting with your money either in
person, online, via the post office or a money service bureau or in a bank.
They may even ask you to buy high value goods, foreign currency or gift
cards such as Amazon, iTunes etc.
The caller may also offer a telephone number for the victim to
telephone or ask the victim to call the number on the back of their bank
card to check that they are genuine. In these circumstances, either the
number offered will not be genuine or, where a genuine number is suggested,
the criminal will stay on the line and pass the victim to a different
individual.
The caller may also ask you to lie to the bank staff as they may ‘be
in on it’ and tell you to say it is for house renovations, a new car or
your family members.
Your bank, the police or His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs will never:
· call and
ask you for your full PIN or full banking password.
· ask you
to lie.
· ask you
to withdraw money to hand over to them.
· ask you
to purchase high value jewellery, watches or foreign currency.
· ask you
to purchase a gift cards or high value goods.
· ask you
to transfer money out of your account.
How to protect yourself
· Be
extremely wary of unsolicited phone calls from your bank or the police,
particularly if they are requesting personal information.
· End the
call, call back on a different phone line or on a mobile. If this is not
possible, wait 5 minutes before calling back. STOP, HANG UP, CALL 159. 159
is a short-code phone service that connects people safely to their bank’s
fraud prevention service or for the police dial ‘101’.
· Speak to
friends or family before carrying out any actions.
· Don’t
trust claims made by cold callers.
· Never
hand over your money, bank cards or make purchases following an unexpected
call.
· Never
share your PIN, One-time passwords (OTPs) or passwords with anyone.
Please remember this key message: The A B C of Scam Awareness
Never ASSUME – never assume a caller is genuine.
Never BELIEVE – never believe a caller is genuine –
scammers may ‘spoof’ official telephone numbers, so the call display may
show your banks telephone number, but it does not mean it is a genuine
call.
Always CONFIRM – always confirm if the call is
genuine – ask for identification (name, branch, employee number etc). Tell
the caller you will hang up and call back to confirm. Call the bank on the
number shown on their website using a different phone or wait at least 10
minutes. Ask if it was a genuine call.
If you have paid money or shared your bank details, contact your
bank’s fraud team straight away.
|