Police undercover investigation scam – how to stay safe


Updated on 30 November 2017 | 2 Comments

Watch out for the latest scam where criminals pose as police officers and ask you to help them with a fake undercover investigation.

Fraudsters are posing as the police and conning people by asking them to help with an undercover operation that doesn’t exist, according to UK Finance, the new trade association set up to represent the finance and banking industry.

Criminals contact people, usually by phone, and say they are the police. In some cases, they say that they're the fraud team from your bank. They then say they are investigating a fraud at a local bank branch and suspect that the staff at the bank are complicit in the crime, including issuing fake bank notes.

Then they ask you to help them with their investigation. You are asked to go to your local branch and withdraw a large amount of money – often thousands of pounds – then hand it over to them for analysis so they can see if it is indeed counterfeit.

Check your free credit report now

The fraudsters tell you that the money will be put back in your bank account after the police investigation is complete. However, if you hand over that money you will never see it again. The whole thing is a scam.

“This is a particularly nasty scam as it plays on people’s public-spirited nature to assist the police,” says Katy Worobec, head of fraud and financial crime prevention, cyber and data sharing at UK Finance.

“We are receiving a growing number of reports of it occurring, with people often losing large amounts of money, so it’s vital that everyone is aware. Remember, the police will never ask you to withdraw money and hand it over to them for safe-keeping.”

Find the best home for your savings

Bank staff struggling to prevent crime

The scammers operating this con are smart enough to get around bank checks too. They tell their victims not to discuss the case with anyone in branch – often saying that they think the staff may be in on the crime.

They also give you plausible excuses to explain why you are withdrawing such large amounts of money. This means that even if bank staff suspect something is wrong and question the victim about why they are taking out the cash, the victim doesn’t trust them and uses the excuses they’ve been given by the con artists.

Opinion: Why your behaviour is increasing financial fraud

Variations on a theme

In a slightly different version of this con people are again contacted by fraudsters pretending to be the police, but rather than ask you to withdraw cash from your local branch they convince you to transfer money to a so-called ‘safe account’ to protect your money from ‘corrupt’ bank staff.

However, the account is run by the criminals and, once you’ve transferred your life savings, they disappear with your money.

Scam victims promised better protection

How to avoid becoming a victim

With so many scams and data leaks occuring these days it is a good idea to regularly check your credit report for suspicious activity. Go to the loveMONEY comparison centre and get a 30-day free trial.

Comments


View Comments

Share the love