Bob
Jensen's Threads on Discovering and Reporting of Frauds and Scams
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
Table of Contents
Organization (the World's largest such organization) for Security and
Co-operation in Europe --- http://www.osce.org/
Bob
Jensen's American History of Fraud --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/415wp/AmericanHistoryOfFraud.htm
Anti-Telemarketing Script
How to Opt Out of Credit Card Offers That You
Do Not Solicit
What mobile phone companies don't want you to know
Important Links for
Reporting Frauds (including ID theft) and Important Things to Know in Avoiding Fraud
Online (Internet) Frauds
Investing Scams
Tax Scams
Free Fraud Alert Services
Fake Drugs (Medications)
What can you do to prevent being taken on eBay?
Medicare Drug Plan Frauds
Widespread price scanner fraud and errors
Dirty Secrets of Debit/Credit Card Companies, Banks, and Credit Rating
Agencies
The Latte Principle of Spending versus Saving
Dirty Secrets of Credit Counseling Fraud
Exploiting the Poor
Lost Hotel Card (Door Key) Fraud
School Tax Scams
Consumers Beware of Unsuspected Automatic
Billings
Free Credit Reports and FICO Scores:
What about your secret, hush-hush,
Bankruptcy Risk Score that you don't even know
about?
Rental Car and City Tax Rip Offs
Hotel Heists: Beware of nuisance hotel fees
Academic Conferences that Rip Off Colleges:
Do you really want to participate in these frauds?
Product Labeling Fraud (Including Food, Vitamin, and Gas Mileage Frauds)
Free Lunch, Dinner, and/or Night in a Post Resort
Charity Frauds and Fraud Reporting
Protect Yourself From Pretexting
Identity (ID) Theft Prevention and Reporting
Lax Government Agency Oversight
Nigerian Fraud Email Gallery
Labor Union Corruption
Free Fraud Alert Services
Online (Internet) Frauds, Consumer Frauds, and Credit Card
Scams
Social Networking Dangers
Diamond Rating Scams
Computer Security --- http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Security1
Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Accounting Internal Controls ---
All Homeowners Should Take Note of This Likely Change in Their Homeowners'
Insurance Policies
Higher Deductibles Sting Homeowners
...more insurers change how they calculate
deductibles, especially for damage caused by windstorms and other natural
events. The newer method of figuring deductibles is based on a percentage of the
insured value of your home -- typically between 1% and 5%, and even higher in
earthquake zones. With home prices having soared in many areas in recent years,
this often works out to be far more costly to the homeowner than the traditional
flat-dollar method of figuring deductibles, by which you pay the first $1,000 or
so of home repairs.
"Higher Deductibles Sting Homeowners," The Wall Street Journal via
Market Watch, August 1, 2007 ---
Click Here
TOP TEN RETAIL RIPOFFS EXPOSED!!
Sneaky Snake Sales Tricks and
How to Avoid Being BIT!
http://www.trampolinesales.com/ripoffs.htm
Global Corruption (in legal systems) Report 2007 ---
http://www.transparency.org/content/download/19093/263155
Automobile Financing and Cheating
I have a Web document on automobile financial fraud and dirty tricks at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudDealers.htm
Just Say No to Tax Refund Anticipation Loans
Medical and Drug Company
Frauds (Including how to safely
buy cheaper medications)
Danger, danger: 5 tips for using a public PC
IDENTITY THEFT: How to Guard Against Theft
of Your Identity
How
can you restore your identity if it has been stolen?
Commercial Scholarly and Academic Journals
and Oligopoly Textbook Publishers
Are
Ripping Off Libraries, Scholars, and Students
Payola in the Music Industry
Mortgage Advice
Reverse Mortgages
Vegetarian Food Frauds
Click Fraud
Deed Swapping and Other Home Equity Scams
Diploma Mill Frauds
and Gray Zone Borderline Education Frauds
What
Accountants Need to Know
Compare telephone calling plans ---
http://www.callsense.com/
Purportedly (no guarantees) these are ways to to straight to humans in
place of threading through computer voices on telephonesGetHuman ---
http://gethuman.com/us/
Banking Online Safer Than Checks: Why you need a Uni-Ball pen!
Phoenix is the city most at risk for identity fraud,
according to the Identity Theft Resource Center. Their new survey shows writing
a check is not safer than banking online because of a scam called "check
washing." The thief erases the ink on a check, fills in whatever he wants, and
cleans out your bank account. But never fear. Where there's a scam like check
fraud, there's sure to be a company with a profitable solution. Uni-Ball makes a
pen filled with a specially formulated ink that can't be washed off. It comes in
several elegant designs, for the sophisticated check-writer.
"Banking Online Safer Than Checks," NPR, October 5, 2007 ---
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=15027414
Jensen Comment
It might be a good idea to simply carry a Uni-Ball or similar "unwashable" ink
pen with your check book.
The Uni-Ball home page is at
http://www.uniball-na.com/
I think these pens or comparable pens are now carried in most office supply
stores.
Anti-Telemarketing Script
TEN MOST EFFECTIVE RESPONSES TO TELEPHONE SOLICITORS:
10. You sound very sexy! What kind of underwear do you have on?
09. Oh, I'm so glad you called! My niece is selling Girl Scout cookies.
How many boxes would you like?
08. Who's your long_distance carrier? I think I can save you money!
07. You sound gay. Did you know that through the love of Our Savior,
Jesus Christ, you can give up that lifestyle?
06. Do you hear voices, like I do, telling you to buy lots of guns?
05. Are you a non_smoker, 55 or under? Let me tell you about whole life.
04. You seem pretty smart, so maybe you know: How long do you think it
would take to get a whole body down a garbage disposal?
03. If Superman and the Power Rangers got into a fight, who do you think
would win?
02. Do you take credit cards? I have one here that I don't think has been
reported.
And my number one best response to that pesky caller is...
01. What do you think of my sex change?
Forwarded by Paula
What do you say to a telemarketer?
The phone rang as I was sitting down to my
evening meal, and as I answered it I was greeted with, "Is this Karl
Brummer?" Not sounding anything like my name. I asked, "Who is calling?"
The telemarketer said he was with The Rubber
Band Powered Freezer Company or something like that. Then I asked him if
he knew Karl Brummer personally and asked why he was calling this
number.
I then said (off to the side), "get some
pictures of the body at various angles and the blood smears", I then
turned back to the phone and advised the caller that he had just called
a murder scene and must stay on the line because we had already traced
his call and he would be receiving a summons to testify in this murder
case.
I questioned the caller at great length as to
his name, address, phone number at home, at work, who he worked for, how
he knew the dead guy and could he prove where he had been about one hour
before he made this call.
The telemarketer was getting very concerned and
his answers were given in a shaky voice. I then told him we had located
his position and the police were entering the building to take him into
custody. At that point I heard the phone fall and the scurrying of his
running away.
My wife asked me as I returned to our table why
I had tears streaming down my face, and so help me, I couldn't tell her
for about 15 minutes. My meal was cold but it was the best meal in a
long, long time.
More serious responses are shown below
What to say when they call if you don't want junk calls
Every time you get a call you consider junk, just
ask the questions in this script. If they answer no, you may be able to
sue
them. Be sure to put your phone number on the National Do-Not-Call
registry by visiting
http://donotcall.gov or by calling 1-888-382-1222.
- ``Are you calling to
sell something?'' (or ``is this a telemarketing call?'')
- ``Could you tell me your full
name please?'' $
- ``And a phone number, area code first?'' $
- ``What's the name of the organization you're
calling for?'' $
- ``Does that organization keep a list of numbers
it's been asked
not to call?'' $
- ``I would like my number(s) put
on
that list. Can you take care of that now?'' $
- ``And does the company you work for also make
telemarketing calls for any other organizations?'' (If they answer
no, skip the next question.)
- (If yes) ``Can you make sure your company
won't call me for
any other organization?'' $
You may need to ask to speak with a supervisor if they sound
lost. When you're ready to let them off, you might
close with ``Is it clear that I never want telemarketing calls from
anyone?''
and just say goodbye. If you feel like making them pay,
keep going:
- ``Will your company keep my number on its
do-not-call list for at least
ten years?'' $
- ``And does your company have a
written policy that says that on paper?'' $
- ``Can you send me a
copy of it?'' $
- ``What's your supervisor's first and last name?''
- ``What's your employer's business name, address
and main telephone number?''
- ``Are you calling for a
tax-exempt nonprofit organization?''
- ``Is this call based on a
previously established business relationship?''
Before hanging up, check you have all their answers written down, then say
goodbye. Add the date and time to your record. (Is it between
8 a.m.
and 9 p.m.? $)
How many telemarketing firms cheat the public and even the charities with
distorted accounting ploys
"Misreporting Fundraising: How Do Nonprofit Organizations Account for
Telemarketing Campaigns? Elizabeth K. Keating Boston College Linda M. Parsons
The University of Alabama Andrea Alston Roberts Boston College, The Accounting
Review, Volume 83, No. 2, March 2008, pp. 417-446 ---
http://www.atypon-link.com/AAA/doi/pdf/10.2308/accr.2008.83.2.417
The purpose of this study is to examine the
frequency, determinants, and implications of misreported fundraising
activities. We compare state telemarketing campaign reports with the
associated information from nonprofits’ annual Form 990 filings to directly
test nonprofits’ revenue and expense recognition policies. Using a
conservative approach that understates the extent to which nonprofit
organizations violate the reporting rules, our study indicates that 74
percent of the regulatory filings from nonprofit organizations fail to
properly report telemarketing expenses. Smaller nonprofits, less monitored
firms, and those with less accounting sophistication are more likely to
inappropriately report telemarketing costs as a component of net revenues
rather than as expenses. Nonprofits that use external accounting services
are more likely to properly classify the cost of their telemarketing
campaigns as professional fundraising fees.
. . .
Prior research has supported a concern
by regulators and donors that nonprofits have incentives to understate
fundraising costs and may inappropriately allocate these costs to other
activities. Additionally, a number of studies provide evidence that donors
direct their charitable gifts to nonprofits that report higher program
ratios and lower fundraising ratios. With more than 76 percent of the more
than $240 billion in annual contributions to nonprofits in the U.S. coming
from individual donors (American Association of Fundraising Counsel [AAFRC]
Trust for Philanthropy 2003), misreporting by nonprofits can potentially
have a large effect on the distribution of donations among nonprofit
organizations.
Our study provides empirical evidence
of how frequently fundraising costs are misreported, and examines the
methods used and the factors associated with these decisions. This study
directly tests the veracity of nonprofits’ reporting practices by comparing
federally mandated nonprofit financial reports to disclosures of revenues
and costs of telemarketing campaigns filed by telemarketing solicitors in
certain states. Additionally, it is the first paper to specifically consider
the effect of accounting sophistication on nonprofit reporting practices.
We design our tests to produce
conservative estimates of telemarketing revenue and expense by using only
the single largest reported telemarketing campaigns conducted each year for
a nonprofit by each of its telemarketing solicitors. These estimates of
total annual telemarketing revenues and expenses are then compared to the
nonprofit’s annual IRS informational filing. Because our design biases
against incorrectly labeling a nonprofit a misreporter, we may not have
fully detected net reporting, particularly by organizations with
contributions raised without the assistance of professional solicitors. This
is particularly a concern for the larger organizations in our sample as they
are more likely to generate contributions from multiple sources. Thus, we
may have underestimated the degree to which misreporting occurs.
Despite our conservative test design,
we find that over 74 percent of the organizations in our sample fail to
properly report telemarketing expenses. Twenty-seven percent of firm-years
contain misreported revenues. Of the remaining 73 percent, a majority
misclassify their reported costs in a category other than professional
fundraising fees, and 9 percent engage in cost allocations, meaning that not
all telemarketing costs are reported as fundraising expenses. Using an even
more conservative design that compared a single year ofcampaign revenue and
expenses to the sum of three years of firm-wide contributions and
fundraising expenses, 14 percent of this sample is misreporting revenues. Of
the remaining sample, 53 percent report telemarketing expenses as other than
professional fundraising fees and, at least, another 4 percent is allocating
telemarketing costs to an expense category other than fundraising.
Our results provide strong evidence
that nonprofits misreport telemarketing fees, which affects how program and
fundraising ratios are reported. The effect on reported ratios of
misreporting is substantial. We find that by misreporting telemarketing
expenses the nonprofits in our sample could understate the fundraising ratio
by as much as 15 percent. Of the misreporting we detect, most occurs among
small nonprofits that have limited accounting sophistication. Our findings
suggest that nonprofits that have greater accounting sophistication and
those likely to be subjected to greater external monitoring are less likely
to be classified as a misreporting firm. We find that the factors associated
with the more prevalent activity of misreporting revenue differ from those
related to expense classification and allocation. Higher accounting
sophistication and more external monitoring appear to play a greater role in
moderating revenue misreporting. Only the use of professional outside
accountants appears related to proper classification of telemarketing costs
as professional fees. We interpret these results as suggesting that
misreporting decisions may be driven either by incentives to improve
reported results or a lack of familiarity with accounting. Prior research
has implicitly or explicitly attributed misreporting to managerial
incentives. Our study is the first to specifically consider accounting
sophistication as a factor inmisreporting.
SOP 98-2 requires nonprofit
organizations to allocate costs incurred jointly for fundraising and program
activities to several expense categories. However, the occurrence of expense
allocation should be related to the joint activity, not systematically
associated with organizational characteristics. Allocation of telemarketing
costs to an expense category other than fundraising is less often associated
with larger organizations and those that have relatively higher levels of
debt. This finding implies that allocation may occur more often in small
organizations in order to improve reported fundraising ratios, or is more
prevalent in organizations that have less accounting sophistication or fewer
monitoring mechanisms.
These findings can inform the current
debates by state and federal regulators as they search for ways to improve
the quality of nonprofit financial reports. In particular, we provide
evidence to policy makers that, in addition to regulation and monitoring,
educating Form 990 preparers can improve accounting quality.
How to Opt Out of Credit Card Offers That You Do Not Solicit
I received the
following from a close personal friend who is also the Director of Instructional
Services at Loyola College in Maryland.
I elected to opt
out using the Consumer Reports Web address given near the bottom of his message.
You have to feed in the information to get a form that you then mail in via the
postal service. The form is automatically filled in from the information that
you typed in earlier. All you have to do is sign and date the form.
I sent in a
second form in my wife’s name.
By the way, have
you ever had troubles with forms that seem to do things like automatically
change your state initials in a list box? The trick to avoid this is to not
leave your cursor in that list box when you submit an electronic form. Click on
some open-ended box such as your name box or a comment box before submitting the
form.
Bob Jensen
From:
AECM, Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU]
On Behalf Of Barry Rice
Sent: Thursday, July 05, 2007 1:26 PM
To:
AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Fed up with shredding credit card offers?
[The following was written
for my family members, most of whom are not technically sophisticated. Feel
free to share this information with YOUR family.]
I was just looking at a
credit card offer before shredding it and noticed an 888 toll-free number
where I could opt out of getting such junk mail. When I searched for more
information about this in Consumer Reports, I found a free article that says
you can "Remove your name from preapproved offers for credit or insurance by
going to
www.optoutprescreen.com or calling 888-5-OPT-OUT. And if
you're willing to deny yourself unsolicited catalogs and junk mail, opt out
at the Direct Marketing Association site (
www.the-dma.org/cgi/offmailinglist ) ."
The complete article is at
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/personal-finance/news/what-if-your-identity-is-stolen-from-you-6-06/overview/0606_stolen-identity_ov.htm?resultPageIndex=1&resultIndex=7&searchTerm=opt-out .
The 888-5-OPT-OUT number
above is the same one on the bottom of my credit card offer. However, I
choose to use the
www.optoutprescreen.com Web site for my own opt out. It requires
you to enter your name, address, Social Security number and date of birth. I
am convinced it is safe to do so because of the Consumer Reports
recommendation and because the above link takes you to
https://www.optoutprescreen.com/?rf=t which is secure since it has the
"s" after "http." The page also has information about how your information
is secure.
Barry Rice
AECM Founder
_________________________
E. Barry Rice, MBA, CPA
Director, Instructional Services
Emeritus Accounting Professor
Loyola College in Maryland
BRice@Loyola.edu
410-617-2478
www.barryrice.com
Facebook me!
www.facebook.com/p/Barry_Rice/20102311
What mobile phone companies don't want you
to know
A Verizon Wireless
effort change your cell phone Terms of Agreement and give out your privacy
information.
You can read more about CPNI at
http://www.fcc.gov/eb/CPNI/
Snopes calls this a
"sort of" scam that commenced with AT&T/Southwestern Bell billings ---
http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/pending/sbc.asp
You can read the following at
http://www.manchicken.com/2007/free-software/verizon-update-dial-1-800-333-9956.html
If you are a
Verizon Wireless customer, you may know that Verizon does
some shady things to make their revenue streams fatter. This
morning I got a letter from Verizon Wireless telling me that
they will start putting ads on my phone. Lucky for me they
are required to have some manner of opt-out functionality in
place. When I looked inside the pamphlet, I saw the number
for the opt-out. It is 1.800.333.9956. I called that number
and got a very nice automated option to opt out.
I encourage
all of my fellow Verizon Wireless customers to send a VERY
strong message to the folks at One Verizon Way and opt out.
Opt out even if you’re not a Verizon Wireless customer. Send
letters to the address “One Verizon Way, Basking Ridge, NJ
07920-1097″ and tell them how disgusted you are with this
new practice.
It is not
okay for Verizon Wireless to put these ads on our personal
property, and if we stand silent while they do it we will be
in a world of hurt. But act fast, because according to these
terms, Verizon Wireless will only give you 30 days to opt
out.
UPDATE:
So, I’ve got some more info for you. Verizon Wireless, in
their agreement, says that you have the right to cancel your
service with them without paying early
termination fees for cancelling.
You can read the
following at
http://www.anonymouscoworker.com/2007/09/21/verizon-wireless-is-selling-your-information/
Turns out all they want to do is sell the “routine”
data they collect through my day to day use of my cell phone. If I decided
to opt out, they warned that I would be denying myself the benefit of their
benevolent oversight of my information and their ability to make the
cell-phone-using portion of my life downright super-duper
puppies-and-unicorns AWESOME. I’d rather not have Verizon selling my info to
every company that would want to buy it, so I opted out by calling this
number:
1 800 333 9956
You may want to give it a ring, too, if you have
Verizon Wireless and you don’t trust them to keep your personal information
in your best interest. Best part? If you don’t call 1 800 333 9956 you’re
automatically opted-in, so you may have been boned already. Give the number
a call if you’d like to keep your information out of the hands of any
douchetastic company that throws a fistful of dollars at Verizon.
Jensen Comment
Breaking your wireless agreement may depend a lot upon the small print in the
agreement you got in writing when you purchased your phone. If you cannot get
out of your early termination fees, wait your time and change from Verizon
Wireless as soon as you get with a more honest company that does not make you
waste a lot of time and trouble to keep your private information private.
People who visit www.intelius.com
can enter a person's name to get a cell phone number, or do the reverse by
entering a number to get the subscriber's name. Each search costs $15. They can
also download a raft of personal information about the subscriber. This was a
feature on ABC evening news, August 14, 2007.
There are many
cell phone numbers, however, that do not make it into the Intelius database,
especially numbers of subscribers who never gave their phone numbers out to any
organization or dialed up a 911 emergency.
"Free Cell Phone Number Search - How To Find Free Cell Phone Numbers," ---
Click Here
The freebies are not really very worthwhile relative to the fee-based services.
Jensen Comment
This will be terribly frustrating if telemarketers and crank callers begin to
use up your allotted free minutes of cell phone time each month.
You may enter your cell phone numbers into the "Do Not Call" registry the
same as you probably did for your landline phone ---
https://www.donotcall.gov/default.aspx
However, telemarketers are not supposed to call cell phones with automatic
dialers ---
https://www.donotcall.gov/default.aspx
This is no protection, however, from crank callers or telemarketers who take the
trouble to dial in your cell phone number. Of course, being in the "Do Not Call"
registry does not protect you from telemarketing charitable organizations that
are typically the biggest nuisance these days. Also the "Do Not Call Register"
provides no guarantee that you will not get calls from commercial telemarketers,
especially those who fly by night.
It might just pay to get the cell phone numbers of your state Senators and
local Congressional representative and call them late at night at home on their
supposedly "personal" cell phones. Better yet, call their children and ask them
to tell their parents how you got their phone numbers.
Note that if you've never given a cell phone number out to any organization
other than your phone company, Intelius may not have your cell phone number in
its dastardly database. You should make your children aware of this. Even
emergency calls to 911 may result in Intelius getting your cell phone number
according to the fine print in my Verizon Wireless contract.
To my knowledge there's no unlisted phone service for cell phones like the
one that you can pay for monthly on your landline number
Nigerian Fraud Email Gallery ---
http://www.potifos.com/fraud/
Who are these perpetrators of Nigerian frauds?
A good cyber-scammer can make up to $7,000 a month
- 22 times the average Nigerian wage - from milking gullible Westerners. His
controlling boss, with an army of trained scammers under his wing in both
America and Europe, will be raking in many times more. Though the fraud is
apparent to many, some people think they have stumbled on a once-in-a-lifetime
deal, and scammers can string them along for months with mythical difficulties.
Some victims eventually contribute huge sums of money to save the deal when it
is suddenly "at risk". Samuel is 19, handsome, bright, well-dressed and
ambitious. He has a special flair for computers and until he quit the game last
year was one of Festac's best-known cyber-scam champions.
Robyn Dixon, "Run-down town where scammers target the West,"
Scotsman,
October 30, 2005 ---
http://news.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=2168172005
New Scam on eBay and Craig's List: Overpayments
When is a “cleared
check” not necessarily a good check?
"eBay, Craig's List Users Targeted in New Scam,"
by Brian Ross,
The Blotter-ABC, October 2, 2007 ---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1906412/posts
Selling something on eBay or Craig's List? Watch
out for who's signing the check to buy it.
Tens of thousands of Americans are being targeted
by the latest scam sweeping America, many of them targeted online through
Craig's List and eBay.
Scammers overpay with counterfeit checks that look
so good most banks accept them. It's only after victims have sent the
overpayment amount back to the scammers that they learn the checks are no
good, and they are out the money.
U.S. Postal Service officials say they have seized
more than $2 billion worth of high-quality counterfeit checks coming from
Nigeria, England, the Netherlands and Canada.
But, they say, many more phonies are still getting
through. . That's the kind of check Jill Parker, a pharmaceutical company
manager in Richmond, Va., got in the mail.
Using Craig's List to rent an apartment she owned
in Chicago, she was contacted by someone moving from London.
"He was going to send me a check for $25,000," she
told ABC News. "I was to deduct what he owned me for the first month's rent
and the security deposit, and I was to wire the balance back to his agent,
who was handling his furnishing."
She took the check to her bank and called a few
days later to see if it had cleared. Told that it had, Jill, as agreed upon,
wired the remaining $21,000, thinking she was ahead $4,000.
"Everything looked great; everything went fine
until about a week later," she said.
The bank informed her that the check was no good
and had been returned not paid. And Jill, not the bank, was out the money.
American banks say they are required by law to make
the money available well before a final determination is made as to whether
the check is good.
"Certain funds, for example, have to be available
on the day after deposit," Nedda Feddis, senior federal counsel for the
American Bankers Association, told ABC News. "And the fraudsters are taking
advantage of that rule."
Good Morning America Video: Phony Check Scam
Hitting America There have been tragic consequences.
Chris Soens, suffering from health problems,
thought she got a dose of good news in the mail when she won $90,000 in a
supposed European lottery.
Once the check had been deposited and posted to her
account, Chris wired back $40,000 for what she was told were fees and taxes.
When the check was discovered to be a phony, the
bank told Chris she had to repay the entire amount.
Her sister, Rebecca Woodworth, says it led to
suicide.
"I think she was devastated," she said. "I think
she was plunged into depths of despair knowing that everything she had was
gone."
The problem has grown so large that the U.S. Postal
Service is launching a nationwide TV campaign starting tomorrow to warn
Americans about the dangers of the bad check scam. The Postal Service has
also set up a new Web site to educate the public on check fraud:
www.fakechecks.org
.
Bob Jensen's threads on how not to get taken on eBay are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#eBay
Bob Jensen's threads on Nigerian frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#NigerianFraud
Work at Home Scams
The general pitch may be built around a sob story, a
promise of lottery winnings, a foreign business offer or a work-at-home
opportunity. But the bottom-line offer is the same: We'll send you a check, you
cash it at your bank, and you keep a portion and send the rest back to us.
Americans appear to be increasingly susceptible to such scams, according to U.S.
Postal Inspection Service investigators, who yesterday announced a crackdown.
They said they intercepted 540,000 checks worth more than $2.1 billion mailed to
U.S. residents in the first eight months of the year. They said 77 people had
been arrested in connection with the schemes -- 60 in the Netherlands, 16 in
Nigeria and one in Canada. Aided by authorities in those countries and in
Britain, investigators said, they had traced many of the come-ons to a shifting
network of Nigerians who, with a few computers, cellphones and bank routing
numbers, have been cashing in on the naivete, goodwill or complicity of Internet
users.
Anita Huslin, "Crackdown Takes Aim At Check-Cashing Scams," The
Washington Post, October 4, 2007, Page D02 ---
Click Here
Scamming the Nigerian Scam Artists
"Baiters Teach Scammers a Lesson," by Robert Andrews, Wired News,
August 4, 2006 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/internet/0,71387-0.html?tw=wn_index_1
They pilfer nearly $200 million from Americans
annually and drive some of their victims to suicide, but Nigeria's notorious
e-mail scam artists may finally have met their match -- and the results can
be hilarious.
British online vigilante
"Shiver Metimbers" is leading tens of thousands of "scambaiters" in a
crusade to shut down
advance-fee fraudsters, grifters who spam
unwitting victims with elaborate, e-mailed sob stories promising a share of
nonexistent fortunes in return for upfront payments.
So-called 419 scams, named after the section of
Nigeria's criminal code that covers the conduct, are the most common type of
con; victims are sometimes left penniless.
But
Metimbers and crew turn the tables on scammers one
by one, boomeranging the tricksters' own tactics to entice them into
performing outlandish tasks in desperate pursuit of cash -- then trumpeting
evidence of the con artists' naïveté for the online world's amusement.
A 43-year-old, self-employed computer engineer from
Manchester, England, Metimbers has most recently spun counter-yarns that
have compelled 419ers to make elaborate
wood
carvings, pose for
comical photos
and
fly
from London to Scotland. In one episode, which
concluded in March after a five-month exchange, he succeeded in having a
Nigerian fraudster
tattoo
"Baited by Shiver" on his body in order to claim a
fictional $46,000 prize.
"Another time, the scammer thought he was going to
get $18,000 out of me, but I actually got the guy to send me $80," said
Metimbers, who started the
419 Eater
community site almost three years ago after receiving
a wave of spam in his inbox.
"I've got between five and 10 on the go at any one
time," Metimbers said. "The worst thing that could possibly happen to these
guys is they get their photo slapped on a website. I feel like a
cybervigilante, doing my bit for the public."
Metimbers, whose real forename is Mike and who
spends up to seven hours a day scambaiting, is team captain in a growing
internet blood sport, in which photographic evidence of competing baiters'
successes constitute
trophies.
419 Eater alone numbers more than 20,000
participants around the world.
Other initiatives
have also surfaced in the anti-scam resistance movement, including
Artists
Against 419, which kills criminals' online
accounts with a deluge of traffic. Baiters delight in convincing
correspondents to be photographed with embarrassing and lewd Western banners
-- like Metimbers, they operate using aliases to protect themselves against
the death threats issued by disgruntled scammers upon realizing they have
been had.
Other humor-heavy vigilantes include
Bait A Mugu,
theScamBaiter.com,
ScamBaits,
Scamorama and
The Billy Goat Curse.
"Shiver is exceedingly creative in getting scammers
to allow their greed to override their judgment," said one disciple
nicknamed
mrsbean, a 29-year-old female IT worker from
Kentucky who claims to have wasted months of organized scammers' time.
"It is equal parts theater, chess game,
psychological study, crime prevention, education and vigilante justice; it's
a battle of the wits," said mrsbean. "Internet scams are unique in that they
offer you an opportunity to personally combat them without compromising your
own safety; the same is just not true of most crime -- one wouldn't take on
the drug dealers in a local neighborhood, for instance.
"The threat of jail certainly doesn't deter these
people, but being humiliated in front of their peers just might cost them
some reputation. It's likely the only punishment most scammers get."
Advance-fee fraud boomed in Nigeria as government
corruption and an economic downturn during the 1990s fueled poverty and
disillusionment in the country, said
Insa
Nolte of the University of Birmingham's Centre of
West African Studies.
To some, internet scams looked like an easy way to
bag some quick cash.
"The availability of e-mail helped to transform a
local form of fraud into one of Nigeria's most important export industries,"
Nolte said.
Some law enforcers trying to shut down 419 scammers
now look on scambaiters' brand of Schadenfreude with envy. The
419legal.org
message board was started by a South African antifraud
officer to gather intelligence from worldwide combatants, while London's
Metropolitan Police said it began a "coordinated approach" this month to get
tips directed from baiter sites to
proper channels. But investigators warn the
counter-criminals are walking a fine line.
"People do it as a hobby or a part-time
occupation," said detective Sgt. Stephen Truick of the Met's
Economic and
Specialist Crime Operational Command Unit. "But
what they often don't realize is that, while they are baiting, these
criminals' accounts are left open and other people are still getting
scammed.
"We are taking down around 200 sites and up to
2,000 e-mail accounts per month -- we are turning the tide," said Truick.
"We've seen our traffic from sites like these increase -- that's been
brilliant, but I could never condone some of their actions."
Continued in article
Federal Trade Commission (Then and Now) ---
http://www.ftc.gov/index.html
EthicsPoint whistleblowing options for employees,
customers, and vendors ---
http://www.ethicspoint.com/en/default.asp
Thomas Neches & Company Links to Useful Websites ---
http://www.thomasneches.com/links.htm
How to Fight Global Crime and Corruption
Transparency International (News, Tools, etc.) ---
http://www.transparency.org/
Bob Jensen's updates on fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Center for Systems Security and Information Assurance ---]
http://www.cssia.org/
Read the Fine Print in Your Life Insurance Policy and Its Amendments
Many life insurers, including Allstate Corp., AXA
Equitable Life Insurance Co., Fidelity Investments, Lincoln Financial Group,
MetLife Inc., New York Life Insurance Co. and Prudential Financial Inc., use
customers' overseas-travel plans as a factor in making underwriting decisions,
and some may deny a policy or increase premiums to customers going to countries
deemed dangerous. Some companies even deny coverage based on previous travel to
a dangerous region. The countries that trigger denials are often on the State
Department's travel warning list, which includes popular destinations such as
Israel, Indonesia and Kenya.
Rachel Emma Silverman, "Life Insurers Face Backlash Over Policy on Foreign
Travel: New Laws Curb Practice Of Denying Coverage to People Who Visit
Certain Countries," The Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2006; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114670871469043437.html?mod=todays_us_nonsub_pj
How to find people, places, and databases (for reporting frauds) ---
http://www.melissadata.com/Lookups/
Internet Fraud ---
http://www.fraud.org/internet/intset.htm
Consumer Ripoffs ---
http://www.ripoffreport.com/
HowToComplain.com ---
http://www.howtocomplain.com/
Purportedly (no guarantees) these are ways to to straight to humans in place
of threading through computer voices on telephonesGetHuman ---
http://gethuman.com/us/
Lemon Law America (Federal and State) ---
http://www.lemonlawamerica.com/
(Choose Where You Live)
Complaints.com --- http://www.complaints.com/
Consumer Reports (not free) ---
http://www.consumerwebwatch.org/
Consumer World (a great resource site) ---
http://www.consumerworld.org/
Consumer Review ---
http://www.consumerreview.com/channels/consumerreview/data/main/index.html
FirstGov for Consumers ---
http://www.consumer.gov/
Federal
Trade Commission ---
http://www.ftc.gov/
TOP TEN RETAIL RIPOFFS EXPOSED ---
http://www.trampolinesales.com/ripoffs.htm
DMA Consumer Assistance ---
http://www.dmaconsumers.org/
Clever Idea: New ShopSmart from Consumer Reports
"Getting Sales Advice From Your Cellphone: New Service Offers Ratings
By 'Consumer Reports'; Categories Are Limited," by Walter S. Mossberg, The
Wall Street Journal, December 14, 2005; Page D14 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113452481752621918.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
At one time or another, all of us have been handed
a Christmas or birthday gift list that includes seemingly simple items such
as "coffee maker," "luggage," or the most dreaded item of all, "TV." But
choosing the right one is no easy task. Once you're actually in the store,
surrounded by options, it's easy to buy the worst brand of coffee maker, or
the luggage that is infamous for wearing out too soon, or the overly
expensive television set.
Wouldn't it be easier if you had some independent
help, right there in the store, to make the best choice and resist the often
bad information provided by salespeople?
Consumer Reports certainly thinks so. This week, it
introduced a cellphone application, ShopSmart, that allows you to carry the
magazine's famous product comparisons and ratings with you while shopping,
right on your mobile phone. Available for Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel
customers just in time for the holiday shopping season, this new service
costs $3.99 a month. Cingular will start carrying ShopSmart next month.
The idea is that, while you're in a store, dazed by
a row of similar-looking products like digital cameras, you can just whip
out your cellphone, launch ShopSmart, and see which camera Consumer Reports
recommends, or how it rates the particular camera you're holding.
We love and trust Consumer Reports, which runs a
very successful and useful paid Web site in addition to its legendary print
magazine. But we were dubious. How well would a cellphone handle such an
application? Would it be easy for last-minute shoppers to rapidly receive,
read and use the data provided by ShopSmart? So, we tested this new
application using a Verizon LG VX8100 cellphone -- a newer phone that runs
on Verizon's ultrafast EV-DO network, which downloads data at about the
speed of a low-end home DSL connection.
(Consumer Reports has a content-sharing
relationship with The Wall Street Journal Online.)
Overall, we were impressed by ShopSmart's
straightforward and easy-to-use approach. Each screen was simple to read at
a glance, and browsing from one screen to the next took just a couple of
seconds. We especially liked the program's ability to add certain products
to a "Favorites" list, for accessing later, and a feature that lets you
email the ShopSmart data to yourself, or anyone else, for later perusal.
There are a couple of downsides. For now, ShopSmart
covers only three categories of products -- electronics, appliances, and
home and garden. It omits important categories Consumer Reports covers in
print and online, including cars, personal finance, food and travel. So it
won't help you to buy that luggage, even though the magazine reviewed it.
And people who already subscribe to the magazine and/or the Web site don't
get it free. Like everyone else, they have to pay the $3.99 monthly fee.
Also, while performance was very good on our test
phone running on the fast EV-DO network, the product-information downloads
would be much, much slower at the typical network speeds most people use.
The program is updated weekly. It uses Yahoo
Shopping to provide up-to-date price ranges for each product, listing prices
from online stores as well as retail chains, so you can find where each
product is sold for the lowest cost.
After downloading ShopSmart through your phone
carrier's built-in online store -- our phone used Verizon's Get It Now -- it
can be opened by pressing just a few keys. This might be particularly useful
for shoppers who use this program only once in a while, so they don't easily
forget how to get started.
To make the best use of the phone's small display,
ShopSmart is simply organized into different sections using five tabs
labeled Ratings, Search, Favorites, Articles and About. The products
themselves are divided into three main categories: Appliances, Electronics,
and Home and Garden. Product types are listed alphabetically within each
category, 10 per screen. Under the Search tab, we found that the Appliances
category included 20 different types, starting with air conditioners and
ending with washing machines, including coffee makers and gas ranges along
the way.
Continued in article
Help for
victims of investment fraud ---
http://www.helpforinvestors.org/
Think you're a victim of investment fraud? Want to
check out your financial adviser? Need to report identity theft? A new
streamlined Web site from the Alliance for Investor Education,
www.helpforinvestors.org,
provides direct links to the right government agencies, regulators, and
trade groups.
Lauren Young, "A Tool for Investors in Distress: The new Web site from
the Alliance for Investor Education offers lots of help, including for those
who may have been duped," Business Week, June 15, 2005 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/jun2005/nf20050615_4371_db035.htm?chan=tc
Kim Zetter. "ID
Theft: What You Need to Know," Wired News, June 29, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,68032,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_8
What should I do if my
wallet or purse is lost or stolen?
Immediately contact all three
credit reporting agencies -- Equifax, Experian and
TransUnion -- and have them place a fraud alert on your
account. This means that companies issuing new credit
accounts in your name will have to call you to obtain
permission first. The alert will last for 90 days only.
You can extend the alert to seven years, but only if
you've been a victim of identity theft and can provide a
police report.
Equifax: 1.800.525.6285
Experian: 1.888.397.3742
TransUnion: 1.800.680.7289
In addition to contacting the
credit reporting agencies, you should file a police
report if your property was stolen. Close any accounts
that you think may have been compromised by the loss or
theft. The FTC provides
more information and a chart
to tick off steps you should take.
What can I do to
prevent myself from becoming a victim?
There isn't really anything you
can do to prevent identity theft. As long as Social
Security numbers are used for purposes other than Social
Security, you are at risk of having your identity stolen
any time someone has access to documents that carry your
number and other personal data. There are, however,
things you can do to lower your risk of becoming a
victim.
- Review monthly financial
statements carefully for fraudulent activity.
- Request a free copy of
your credit report from a credit-reporting agency
once a year to examine it for fraudulent activity. A
new law requiring credit reporting agencies to
provide a free annual report goes into effect
nationwide in September. Until then, it's in effect
only in western and Midwestern states. The credit
report will show who requested access to your credit
record. Look for requests from companies you haven't
done business with and tell credit-reporting
agencies if you see credit accounts that you didn't
open or debts you didn't incur. Check to see that
your name and address are correct.
- Don't give your Social
Security number to any business that doesn't really
need it.
- Cross shred sensitive
documents. Thieves have been known to piece together
strips of paper that are shredded only once.
Cross-shredders double-shred documents.
- Shred pre-approved
credit-card offers before tossing them in the
garbage.
- Don't store sensitive
personal information, such as bank account numbers
and passwords, on home computers or handheld
devices.
- Install a firewall and
anti-virus software on your computer and keep the
virus definitions up to date to prevent viruses and
Trojan horses from infecting your computer and
feeding personal information back to hackers.
- Don't fall for phishing
scams. Phishing occurs when someone sends you an
e-mail purporting to be from your bank or other
company you do business with and requesting you to
update your account information.
- Use specially designed
software programs to clean data from your computer
before you sell or discard it. Simply deleting files
will not remove data from the memory.
- Don't carry any documents
in your wallet that have your Social Security number
on them, including your medical card or military ID,
on days when you don't need the card.
- Opt-out when your bank or
other financial institution requests permission to
share information about you with other businesses.
- Close all credit-card
accounts except the one or two that you really need.
- If you are an identity
theft victim and live in one of ten states,
including California, Colorado, Louisiana, Maine,
Texas, Vermont or Washington, consider placing a
"freeze" on your credit report so that no one can
access it without your permission. More than 20
additional states are considering passing similar
legislation. Creditors need to look at your report
before granting you credit. By freezing your report,
it will prevent unauthorized people from seeing your
personal data and it will prevent creditors from
opening a new credit account in your name for an
impostor. Some states only let victims of identity
theft freeze their records. Other states allow
anyone to freeze their record. The State Public
Interest Research Groups maintains
a list of states with
freeze laws.
Bob Jensen's helpers on identity
theft ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft
Bob Jensen's threads on computing
and network security ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
What to know and do when you suspect fraud ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/wells.htm
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners ---
http://www.acfe.com/home.asp
PricewaterhouseCoopers - Global Economic Crime Survey 2003 ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/2003_PwC_CrimeReport.pdf
FraudNet the Government Accountability Office (GAO) ---
http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm
The Institute of Internal Auditors ---
http://www.theiia.org/
Information Systems Audit and Control Association ---
http://www.isaca.org/
AICPA's Business Valuation and Forensic & Litigation Services Center (not
free to the public) --- http://bvfls.aicpa.org/
Fraud Position Statement of the Institute of Internal Auditors of the UK
and Ireland ---
http://www.blindtiger.co.uk/IIA/uploads/48dc2e62-f2a7bd939a--7c26/2003FraudPositionStatement.pdf
I snipped this link to
http://snipurl.com/IIAFraudStatementUK
The Fraud Detectives
Consultant Network --- http://www.frauddetectives.com/
This is a helpful site, although I
might add that accountants, attorneys, and others can list themselves free at
this site with no filtering with regard to skills and experience.
February 18, 2005 message from Joanne Tweed [ibridges@san.rr.com]
America's seniors are being cheated of their life's
savings by securities Broker/Dealers.
SENIORS AGAINST SECURITIES FRAUD http://seniorsagainstsecuritiesfraud.com
offers supportive educational links and solutions. Please consider linking.
Most Sincerely,
Joanne Tweed
Occupational Fraud Report
In 2003,
occupational fraud is estimated at $660 billion.
2004 Report to the Nation on
Occupational Fraud and Abuse, The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
--- http://www.cfenet.com/resources/rttn.asp
|
Occupational
fraud and abuse is a widespread problem that affects every entity,
regardless of size, location or industry. The ACFE has made it a
goal to better educate the public and anti-fraud professionals about
this threat.
The 2004
Report to the Nation is based on a survey that began in late
2003 and ran through the early months of 2004. Certified Fraud
Examiners throughout the US were asked to provide detailed
information on one fraud case he or she had personally investigated
that met the following criteria:
- The case
involved occupational fraud;
- The fraud
occurred within the last two years;
- The
investigation of the fraud was complete; and
- The CFE was
reasonably sure that the perpetrator had been identified.
|
The end result is a
comprehensive report that sheds light on occupational fraud and abuse while
offering stark lessons and valuable insights about its prevention and
detection.
Download
the 2004 Report to the Nation * (564
kb)
Order
a printed copy of the 2004 Report to the Nation
Download
the 2002 Report to the Nation * (857
kb)
Download
the 1996 Report to the Nation * (235
kb)
The Museum of Hoaxes http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/
Academic fraud and plagiarism threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
How Technology Can
Reduce Fraud
Resources
to prevent and discover fraud from the Association of Fraud Examiners --- http://www.cfenet.com/resources/resources.asp
Self-study
training for a career in fraud examination --- http://marketplace.cfenet.com/products/products.asp
Bob Jensen's Other Documents On
Fraud
Important Links for Reporting Frauds and
Important Things to Know in Avoiding Fraud (including
ID theft)
Purportedly (no guarantees) these are ways to to straight to humans in place of
threading through computer voices on telephones
GetHuman ---
http://gethuman.com/us/
FTC helpers if suspect someone else has become you --- http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/idtsummary.pdf
FTC helpers in getting your credit report and FICO score
--- http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/edcams/credit/index.html
FTC consumer warnings --- http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/consumer.htm
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission ---
http://www.cpsc.gov/
Lemon Law America (Federal and State) ---
http://www.lemonlawamerica.com/
TOP TEN RETAIL RIPOFFS EXPOSED ---
http://www.trampolinesales.com/ripoffs.htm
Fraudulent (Supposed) Publishers (especially targeting poets) ---
http://www.foetry.com/
A government Website on Cybercrime ---
http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/cybercrime/
Bob Jensen's threads on computing and networking security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Consumer Reports Web Watch ---
http://www.consumerwebwatch.org/for-consumers.cfm
Richard Campbell notes a nice white collar crime blog edited by some law
professors ---
http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/whitecollarcrime_blog/
Question
What should you do if you think you're a possible victim of ID theft?
Answer
There are a number of things to do, especially the following:
Fill out an identity theft report with your local, state or federal law
enforcement agency. It's unclear if the mere loss or theft of personal
information constitutes identity theft, but filing a report may offer additional
protections. The FTC makes an affidavit available at
http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft/pdf/affidavit.pdf
"Tips for Preventing or Catching Identity Theft: Contacting one of
three credit reporting agencies is the key to monitoring possible fraud," MIT's
Technology Review, May 24, 2006 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=16923
Consumer advocates have some advice for the 26.5
million veterans whose personal information was stolen from the home of a
Veterans Affairs employee: Don't panic.
Identity theft may be a growing problem that
affected 9.3 million Americans last year, according to Javelin Strategy and
Research. But consumer advocates say a few precautions can lessen the
chances of becoming a victim, even for people whose personal information has
been stolen.
The first thing to do if you think your Social
Security number, birth date or other sensitive data has fallen into the
wrong hands is to place an initial fraud alert on your credit reports. There
are three major credit reporting agencies, but a call to one -- for
instance, Equifax at 800-525-6285 -- will ensure the other two are notified.
A fraud alert entitles you to a free copy of your
credit report from each of the three companies. Order one from each and
scrutinize them carefully for accounts you didn't open or debts you don't
recognize. Also, make sure that information such as your Social Security
number and employer are correct on each report.
If you discover accounts or transactions you didn't
authorize, call and speak with someone in the fraud department of each
company involved. Keep a log of each person contacted, along with the date,
time and topics discussed on each call.
An initial fraud alert also requires businesses to
take additional steps to confirm your identity before issuing loans or
opening accounts in your name. Be prepared for loan and credit card
applications to take slightly longer to be processed.
It's important to understand that an initial fraud
alert, as the name implies, is only a temporary fix. That's because it
remains in effect for only 90 days. To prevent becoming a victim after the
three months are up, you'll need to take additional steps.
Next, fill out an identity theft report with your
local, state or federal law enforcement agency. It's unclear if the mere
loss or theft of personal information constitutes identity theft, but filing
a report may offer additional protections. The FTC makes an affidavit
available at
http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft/pdf/affidavit.pdf
Ask each of the three credit reporting companies to
place a freeze or extended alert on your account. Seventeen states have
enacted laws that require the reporting companies to block access to your
files in most instances. Check with the Consumers Union Web site or attorney
general in your state to see if this is available where you live.
Even if your state doesn't offer this protection,
ask Equifax, TransUnion and Experian to give you an extended alert anyway.
This option will entitle you to two free credit reports per year, and it
will also require the credit reporting companies to remove you from lists
marketers use to send prescreened credit offers for five years.
To qualify for an extended alert, the reporting
companies will require you to prove you've been the victim of identity
theft, even though it is not always clear how the law defines a victim in
this case. Be sure to include the FTC affidavit or other law enforcement
report you filed. It is legal documentation that your personal
identification has been stolen.
Finally, recognize that safeguarding your privacy
is a never-ending task, even for people who have no reason to believe their
personal information has been stolen. A little education and prevention, say
consumer advocates, can go a long way.
''You need an ongoing vigilance,'' says Paul
Stephens, a policy analyst with the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San
Diego. ''We want people to be proactive, to be vigilant, but we also don't
want to have people panicking.''
On the Net:
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/idtheft.htm
http://privacyrights.org
http://www.consumersunion.org/creditmatters/creditmatterslearnmore/002583.html
Also see Identity (ID) Theft Prevention
and Reporting
One link is to a listing of where you can file Internet complaints ---
http://www.consumerwebwatch.org/consumer-center.cfm
Organizations and government agencies featured in this section are listed
alphabetically.
Better Business Bureau Online
The Better Business Bureau Online, the electronic arm of the Better Business
Bureau, offers consumers the opportunity to file a complaint against
e-commerce sites as well as offline businesses. The Better Business Bureau
was founded in 1912 and seeks to create a more fair marketplace through
consumer education and voluntary self-regulation on the part of companies.
http://www.bbbonline.org/consumer/complaint.asp
Consumer Sentinel
Consumer Sentinel is a complaint database designed to provide law
enforcement agencies with information on Internet cons, telemarketing scams
and other consumer fraud-related complaints. The database, which is
maintained by the Federal Trade Commission, is available to 40 federal law
enforcement organizations, more than 200 state and local fraud-fighting
agencies, and every state attorney general in the United States. You may
register a complaint
here.
http://www.consumer.gov/sentinel/index.html
econsumer.gov
This international site, launched by a coalition of 13 nations, registers
cross-border e-commerce complaints and offers tips for safe shopping online.
It utilizes the Consumer Sentinel's network of Internet fraud complaint data
and shares it in several languages with consumer protection law enforcers in
countries that belong to the International Marketing Supervision Network.
http://www.econsumer.gov
Internet Fraud Complaint Center
The Internet Fraud Complaint Center enables consumers to log online fraud
complaints. The center is the result of a partnership between the FBI and
the National White Collar Crime Center (NW3C), a nationwide support network
for enforcement agencies involved in the prevention, investigation, and
prosecution of economic and high-tech crime. NW3C is funded through a grant
from the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, and the
U.S. Department of Justice.
http://www1.ifccfbi.gov/index.asp
National Fraud Information Center
The National Fraud Information Center (NFIC) was established in 1992 by the
National Consumers League and continues to be funded by the organization.
NFIC offers an online form for consumers who are interested in registering
an Internet fraud complaint.
http://www.fraud.org/
State Attorneys General
Contact your state attorney general if you feel you have been a victim of
consumer fraud on the Web. Consult individual state sites for telephone or
electronic contact information for filing complaints. U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission offers tips
on avoiding Internet fraud when investing, and a mechanism to register
Internet fraud or spam complaints for investigation.
http://www.naag.org/ag/full_ag_table.php
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission offers tips on avoiding Internet
fraud when investing, and a mechanism to register Internet fraud or spam
complaints for investigation.
http://www.sec.gov/complaint.shtml
Corporate Fraud Reporting
Dirty Tricks Played on Job Seekers
Job hunters using Monster.com, the employment Web site
owned by Monster Worldwide, received fake job offers by e-mail that asks for
their Bank of America account information. The e-mail contains personal
information collected when hackers tricked Monster.com customers into
downloading a virus in a fake job-seeking tool, according to researchers at
Symantec, the world's biggest maker of security software.
Rochelle Garner, "Monster.com Users Get Fake Offers And Request," The
Washington Post, August 23, 2007, Page D04 ---
Click Here
Question
What's the use of spoof@paypal.com ?
November 13, 2006 message from Schatzel, John
[JSchatzel@STONEHILL.EDU]
Yeah, these "phishing" scams have netted crocks
over $2.8 billion this past year according to an article I read recently. I
thought the number sounded high, but they are bombarding people with genuine
looking requests from PayPal and Amazon.com saying that your account has
been restricted, charged for something you didn't buy, or is being
investigated for account tampering by their security staff. A lot of people
panic apparently when they see this stuff and reply with personal account
information. I feel sorry for them so every time I get one for PayPal I
reply by sending it to
spoof@paypal.com and they supposedly
investigate them. If anyone has a similar email address for Amazon, please
let us know. Just using Amazon's customer service form is not enough. The
whole message has to be forwarded to them, so they can investigate the
source of the illegal message.
John Schatzel
November 14, 2006
Snopes has a pretty good page for identifying phishing spoofs. Enter "phishing"
into the search box at
http://www.snopes.com/
Also see what you get when you enter "Nigerian" into the search box.
Bob Jensen
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners ---
http://www.acfe.com/home.asp
In particular note the Code of Business Ethics and Conduct ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/code_of_business_ethics.pdf
Fraud Resources Center ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/fraud.asp
Fraud Prevention Check-Up ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/check.asp
Fraud Prevention CD-ROM ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/cd.asp
How to Prevent Small Business Fraud ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/smallbusinessfraudexcerpt.pdf
Other Downloads ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/downloads.asp
Also note the explosion of salaries of Certified Fraud Examiners ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/2005comp-guide.pdf
PricewaterhouseCoopers - Global Economic Crime Survey 2003 ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/2003_PwC_CrimeReport.pdf
FraudNetrom the Government Accountability Office (GAO) --- http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm
The Institute of Internal Auditors ---
http://www.theiia.org/
AICPA's Business Valuation and Forensic & Litigation Services Center (not
free to the public) ---
http://bvfls.aicpa.org/
Fraud Position Statement of the Institute of Internal Auditors of the UK and
Ireland ---
http://www.blindtiger.co.uk/IIA/uploads/48dc2e62-f2a7bd939a--7c26/2003FraudPositionStatement.pdf
I snipped this link to
http://snipurl.com/IIAFraudStatementUK
The Fraud Detectives
Consultant Network --- http://www.frauddetectives.com/
This is a helpful site, although I
might add that accountants, attorneys, and others can list themselves free at
this site with no filtering with regard to skills and experience.
Warning to retirees: Beware of your families
Financial swindles are one of the fastest-growing forms
of elder abuse. By some estimates, as many as five million senior citizens are
victimized each year, says Sara Aravanis, director of the nonprofit National
Center on Elder Abuse, which provides information to federal and state policy
makers. Because of the problem's spread, "many states have laws authorizing
financial institutions to report suspicions of elderly abuse," says Bruce Jay
Baker, general counsel for the Illinois Bankers Association. Earlier this
summer, the Securities and Exchange Commission hosted a Seniors Summit to
highlight the issue, with SEC Chairman Christopher Cox noting that protecting
seniors' pocketbooks "is one of the most important issues of our time."
Jeff D. Opdyke, "Intimate Betrayal: When the Elderly Are Robbed by Their Family
Members," The Wall Street Journal, August 30, 2006; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115689331870748918.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
February 18, 2005 message from Joanne Tweed [ibridges@san.rr.com]
America's seniors are being cheated of their life's
savings by securities Broker/Dealers.
SENIORS AGAINST SECURITIES FRAUD http://seniorsagainstsecuritiesfraud.com
offers supportive educational links and solutions. Please consider linking.
Most Sincerely,
Joanne Tweed
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners ---
http://www.acfe.com/home.asp
In particular note the Code of Business Ethics and Conduct ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/code_of_business_ethics.pdf
Fraud Resources Center ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/fraud.asp
Fraud Prevention Check-Up ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/check.asp
Fraud Prevention CD-ROM ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/cd.asp
How to Prevent Small Business Fraud ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/smallbusinessfraudexcerpt.pdf
Other Downloads ---
http://www.acfe.com/fraud/downloads.asp
Also note the explosion of salaries of Certified Fraud Examiners ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/2005comp-guide.pdf
PricewaterhouseCoopers - Global Economic Crime Survey 2003 ---
http://www.acfe.com/documents/2003_PwC_CrimeReport.pdf
The Institute of Internal Auditors ---
http://www.theiia.org/
AICPA's Business Valuation and Forensic & Litigation Services Center (not
free to the public) ---
http://bvfls.aicpa.org/
Fraud Position Statement of the Institute of Internal Auditors of the UK and
Ireland ---
http://www.blindtiger.co.uk/IIA/uploads/48dc2e62-f2a7bd939a--7c26/2003FraudPositionStatement.pdf
I snipped this link to
http://snipurl.com/IIAFraudStatementUK
From the Government Accountability Office (GAO) --- http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm
FraudNET
The purpose of the Government Accountability Office's
FraudNET
is to facilitate the reporting of allegations of fraud, waste, abuse, or
mismanagement of federal funds.
If you want to report such allegations, you may do so
by filling out a FraudNET
Form or by using one of these other methods:
- Send allegations via e-mail to fraudnet@gao.gov
- Send a fax to FraudNet at 202-512-3086
- Write to:
GAO FraudNET
441 G Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20548
A FraudNET
Form requires a web browser that supports forms, HTML 3.0 tables and 128
bit encryption.
In all cases, please provide as much detail as
possible concerning the who, when, where, what, how and how much. You do not
need to provide your name. The information you submit will be entered over a
secure connection. All information submitted is safeguarded against
unauthorized disclosure.
Free Corporate Fraud Hotline Initiated February 2003: 888-622-0117
-
2,000 calls logged within eight months.
-
Callers can be anonymous
-
Several new cases opened based on caller information
-
Several existing cases were enhanced
-
Public cooperation is essential
The Fraud Detectives
Consultant Network --- http://www.frauddetectives.com/
Welcome
to the Forensic Group LLC, host of the FraudDETECTIVES Consultant
Network, the premier Web source for locating leading Forensic CPAs, Certified
Fraud Examiners, Certified Turnaround Professionals, Crisis Managers, Litigation
Specialists, and Bankruptcy Professionals.
Fraud Tips
Free
Fraud Advice from the experts.
Fraud Tales
Forensic accounting true Tales:
"Back
to Basics"
"The
Case of the Shrinking Margins".
What Is Fraud?
Do you realize how much fraud costs organizations
annually? Read What
Every CEO Should Know about fraud.
KnowFRAUD?
Take A
Short Quiz just for fun to test your knowledge of fraud.
Comment from Bob
Jensen
This is a helpful site, although I
might add that accountants, attorneys, and others can list themselves free at
this site with no filtering with regard to skills and experience.
Title Washing: How Car Titles Get Laundered
Unsuspectingly you may be purchasing a car that was flooded during a hurricane
Thousands of vehicles that sat in the murky waters
left by hurricanes Katrina and Rita are starting to show up on the used-car
market. Most states require that flooded cars be labeled as such on the title.
But scam artists have found loopholes in the system. They re-register cars in
states with looser title laws -- sometimes two or three states -- until the
warning that the car was flooded is gone. This fraudulent practice is known as
"title washing."
Jeff Brady, "Holes in Monitoring System Let Lemons Get Resold," NPR,
January 31, 2006 ---
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5173717
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
"Identity Theft, Net Scams Rose in '04-FTC ," Reuters, The
Washington Post, February 1, 2005 --- http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A54010-2005Feb1.html?nav=headlines
Americans lost at least $548 million to identity
theft and consumer fraud last year as the Internet provided new victims for
age-old scams, according to government statistics released Tuesday.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission said it received
635,000 consumer complaints in 2004 as criminals sold nonexistent products
through online auction sites like eBay Inc. or went shopping with stolen
credit cards
Identity theft -- the practice of running up bills or
committing crimes in someone else's name -- topped the list with 247,000
complaints, up 15 percent from the previous year.
Fraud and identity theft cost consumers at least $437
million in 2003.
Internet-related fraud accounted for more than half
of the remaining complaints as scammers found victims through Web sites or
unsolicited e-mail, the FTC said.
Auction fraud was the most common Internet scam, the
FTC said in its annual fraud report, followed by complaints about online
shopping and Internet access service.
The number of incidents was up across nearly every
category from 2003, but it was unclear whether that represented an actual
increase in fraud or simply a greater awareness of the FTC's Consumer Sentinel
fraud program.
Consumers likely lost significantly more than the
amount reported, as fewer than half were able to pin a dollar figure on their
losses.
The median monetary loss reported was $259, though 41
consumers reported losses of $1 million or more.
The FTC did not specify how many identity-theft
incidents took place online. A recent report by the Better Business Bureau
found that most cases of identity theft occurred through the theft of a
checkbook or other offline methods.
Question
What should you do if you think you're a possible victim of ID theft?
Answer
There are a number of things to do, especially the following:
Fill out an identity theft report with your local, state or federal law
enforcement agency. It's unclear if the mere loss or theft of personal
information constitutes identity theft, but filing a report may offer additional
protections. The FTC makes an affidavit available at
http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft/pdf/affidavit.pdf
"Tips for Preventing or Catching Identity Theft: Contacting one of
three credit reporting agencies is the key to monitoring possible fraud," MIT's
Technology Review, May 24, 2006 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=16923
Consumer advocates have some advice for the 26.5
million veterans whose personal information was stolen from the home of a
Veterans Affairs employee: Don't panic.
Identity theft may be a growing problem that
affected 9.3 million Americans last year, according to Javelin Strategy and
Research. But consumer advocates say a few precautions can lessen the
chances of becoming a victim, even for people whose personal information has
been stolen.
The first thing to do if you think your Social
Security number, birth date or other sensitive data has fallen into the
wrong hands is to place an initial fraud alert on your credit reports. There
are three major credit reporting agencies, but a call to one -- for
instance, Equifax at 800-525-6285 -- will ensure the other two are notified.
A fraud alert entitles you to a free copy of your
credit report from each of the three companies. Order one from each and
scrutinize them carefully for accounts you didn't open or debts you don't
recognize. Also, make sure that information such as your Social Security
number and employer are correct on each report.
If you discover accounts or transactions you didn't
authorize, call and speak with someone in the fraud department of each
company involved. Keep a log of each person contacted, along with the date,
time and topics discussed on each call.
An initial fraud alert also requires businesses to
take additional steps to confirm your identity before issuing loans or
opening accounts in your name. Be prepared for loan and credit card
applications to take slightly longer to be processed.
It's important to understand that an initial fraud
alert, as the name implies, is only a temporary fix. That's because it
remains in effect for only 90 days. To prevent becoming a victim after the
three months are up, you'll need to take additional steps.
Next, fill out an identity theft report with your
local, state or federal law enforcement agency. It's unclear if the mere
loss or theft of personal information constitutes identity theft, but filing
a report may offer additional protections. The FTC makes an affidavit
available at
http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft/pdf/affidavit.pdf
Ask each of the three credit reporting companies to
place a freeze or extended alert on your account. Seventeen states have
enacted laws that require the reporting companies to block access to your
files in most instances. Check with the Consumers Union Web site or attorney
general in your state to see if this is available where you live.
Even if your state doesn't offer this protection,
ask Equifax, TransUnion and Experian to give you an extended alert anyway.
This option will entitle you to two free credit reports per year, and it
will also require the credit reporting companies to remove you from lists
marketers use to send prescreened credit offers for five years.
To qualify for an extended alert, the reporting
companies will require you to prove you've been the victim of identity
theft, even though it is not always clear how the law defines a victim in
this case. Be sure to include the FTC affidavit or other law enforcement
report you filed. It is legal documentation that your personal
identification has been stolen.
Finally, recognize that safeguarding your privacy
is a never-ending task, even for people who have no reason to believe their
personal information has been stolen. A little education and prevention, say
consumer advocates, can go a long way.
''You need an ongoing vigilance,'' says Paul
Stephens, a policy analyst with the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San
Diego. ''We want people to be proactive, to be vigilant, but we also don't
want to have people panicking.''
On the Net:
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/idtheft.htm
http://privacyrights.org
http://www.consumersunion.org/creditmatters/creditmatterslearnmore/002583.html
I am really glad to see the Digital Duo return to PBS television.
Back in the 1990s I loved this show as a helper to those of us struggling to
learn new computing and networking technologies. The most important
attribute of this show is the willingness of the Duo to criticize the products
or services that they are evaluating. The Duo is consumer-oriented.
Unlike its counterpart Computer Chronicles, the Digital Duo are probably not
especially popular among vendors who supply the products and services.
The main site for the Digital Duo
http://www.pcworld.com/digitalduo/index/0,00.asp
The Digital Duo is the independent, irreverent video
review of all things digital. Hosted by Stephen Manes and Angela Gunn.
More about PC
World's Digital Duo
The weekly shows are probably listed in your television guide for your local PBS
channel. I suggest you record each show and then
save the recordings that you think will be helpful to your students or your
family in the future.
One of the features that I watched this weekend featured free access to
credit reports. The Duo pointed out how the majority of the sites that now
offer free credit reports should be avoided. They recommended using
https://www.annualcreditreport.com/cra/index.jsp
I think this is good advice, but I have some other recommendations below.
From "Smart Stops on the Web," Journal of
Accountancy, January 2004, Page 31 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/feb2004/news_web.htm
Online Education for Managers
www.bettermanagement.com
CPAs and business managers can brush up on the basics of fraud
as well as learn detection and prevention strategies from articles and case
studies at this Web site. Titles include “Business Intelligence in the
Financial Services Industry.” Fraud investigators can explore the library
section to read related content on money laundering, regulatory compliance and
risk management and also “solve business problems” with
anti-money-laundering and financial services solutions.
Fraud or Frivolity?
www.stockfraudlawyersnetwork.com
CPAs acting as financial consultants will want to visit this
e-stop to find out about broker misconduct and what distinguishes a securities
fraud case from a frivolous claim. Users also can locate a securities fraud
lawyer in their area and get a free consultation.
Fraud Is…
alextalksbusiness.com
Alex Kwechansky, public speaker and author of the book Never
Underestimate Who Can Cheat You, gives users a better understanding of
fraud in publicly and privately owned companies and how to spot and,
hopefully, thwart it at this Web site. The section Dirty Deeds defines
different fraud concepts including embezzlement, insider trading and skimming,
while the section Here’s the Point outlines some of fraud’s early warning
signs.
Insure Against Fraud
www.insurancefraud.org
CPAs looking to advise clients on insurance fraud will find
legislative news, the Fraud Case of the Month and the Fraud Hall of Shame at
this Web site, first listed as a Smart Stop in April 2002 in response to
fraudulent 9/11 claims. Visitors to the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud’s
Web stop also can receive a free sample of Insurance Fraud Weekl