#fraud - Bridge Pioneers https://www.broadoak-capital.com We are a recovery intelligence firm committed to helping you recover your money at the shortest possible time frame and with the most cost effective approach. Sun, 10 Sep 2023 19:51:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://www.broadoak-capital.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/WhatsApp_Image_2022-08-30_at_9.54.55_AM-removebg-previewqshhssjssj-150x150.png #fraud - Bridge Pioneers https://www.broadoak-capital.com 32 32 6 Scams That Target Your Bank Account https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/6-scams-that-target-your-bank-account/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=6-scams-that-target-your-bank-account https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/6-scams-that-target-your-bank-account/#respond Sun, 10 Sep 2023 19:51:21 +0000 https://www.broadoak-capital.com/?p=3046 6 Scams That Target Your Bank Account

Scamming is rampant. More than 40,000 people filed scam reports with the Better Business Bureau in 2022, and the median reported dollar loss was $171, according to that year’s BBB Scam Tracker Risk Report. A lot of those scams are targeting your bank accounts. And though federal law limits liability for credit card fraud, it’s not […]

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6 Scams That Target Your Bank Account

Scamming is rampant. More than 40,000 people filed scam reports with the Better Business Bureau in 2022, and the median reported dollar loss was $171, according to that year’s BBB Scam Tracker Risk Report. A lot of those scams are targeting your bank accounts.
And though federal law limits liability for credit card fraud, it’s not the same for bank scams, such as being given a fake check you deposit and then send part of the amount to a fraudster.
“You are responsible for any deposits made to your account,” says Liz Cackowski, a certified financial crimes investigator and senior fraud investigator for Republic Bank.
Luckily, you can protect yourself and your bank account by learning how to identify six common bank scams.

Check Overpayment Scams

Check overpayment fraud is a popular scam that targets sellers from online auctions and classified advertisement websites. During a transaction, the scammer will pay the seller with a bogus check for more than the amount of the item. The scammer will then ask the seller to wire the difference back after making the deposit. The seller will be out not only a returned item fee from the bank, but also whatever cash the supposed buyer received.
How to avoid this scam: Independently verify a buyer’s name, address and phone number. A check that comes from an unknown party should be a red flag, Cackowski says. If you are selling an item to someone in Ohio, but the check lists the name of a dental office in the District of Columbia, the payment may not be legitimate. Regardless of how insistent a buyer may be, never cash a check and immediately wire money from it. Talk to your bank if you have any concerns about a payment you receive.

Credit Card and Bank Account Scams

You may get emails or calls from someone who claims to be from your credit card issuer or bank. The messages may ask you to call back to discuss a problem or to click on a link to update your account information. In some cases, scammers may even claim they are investigating possible fraud on your account and ask for details such as your account number or Social Security number to investigate further. These are all attempts to get you to hand over sensitive information.

How to avoid this scam: Do not click on any email links or attachments. Scam phone messages may include a callback number, but you should ignore that. “Don’t call the number they gave you. Call the number you have,” says Michael Foguth, president and founder of advisory firm Foguth Financial Group in Brighton, Michigan. Otherwise, you could find yourself on the phone with the scammer rather than a bank representative.

Charity Scams

Not everyone asking for a charitable donation may be on the up and up. “Fraudsters are out there, and they do prey on people’s good intentions,” says Caleb Barnum of Sydney-based Integrated Research. For example, you could receive a call asking for donations to the local police department or to military families. The crooks elicit information about your bank account or debit card to make the donation over the phone, giving them full access to your checking account.
How to avoid this scam: To make sure your good intentions don’t go to waste, the safest way to give to a charity is by choosing an organization you know and trust. Also, be careful about sharing your personal information with people who reach out by telephone or email.

Online Lending Scams

Victims of these scams are often those who have trouble obtaining a bank loan. They may receive an email from a supposed lender or find a website offering easy access to money. “Because the victim thinks they are applying for a loan, they don’t think twice about providing sensitive information,” Cackowski says. After the scammer obtains bank account details, the victim may send a loan payment or direct deposit. The victim may also be asked to make an immediate good-faith payment, but as with the check overpayment scam, the “loan” is fraudulent.

How to avoid this scam: Always check reviews and the Better Business Bureau rating of any company offering a loan. If you can’t find reviews or ratings, the business may not be real.

Employment Scams

Younger adults are more likely to be the victims of employment scams than other age groups, the Better Business Bureau reports. In most of these scenarios, the crooks offer a job but request personal information or money for “training” or “equipment.”
How to avoid this scam: Never send money to a potential employer. You should not have to pay for equipment, background screening or, generally, the promise of work. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

Award Scams

In these scams, you are typically told you’ve won a foreign lottery. Crooks will send you a large check to deposit into your personal checking account. You will then be asked to immediately wire a portion of the funds to pay for government taxes and administrative fees.
How to avoid this scam: If you didn’t enter the contest, then you didn’t win it. Note that if you participate in a foreign lottery via mail or phone, you are violating federal law. Also, U.S. lottery winners typically pay taxes on a lump-sum payment in the year the money was received or each year on installment payments.

Protecting Yourself From Bank Scams

Keep common scams in mind, and remember how to avoid them before you put your funds at risk. Most important, “Do not pay something (you didn’t initiate) over the phone,” Foguth says. “Just don’t do it.”

Scammers will continue to come up with creative ways to get into people’s bank accounts.
“They go after easy targets,” Barnum says. Criminals often look for people who are searching for jobs, dating, selling products and even do-gooders looking to help the needy.
What’s more, seniors are in the bull’s-eye for scams. “Unfortunately, that generation tends to be a very trusting generation,” Barnum notes.

Do Banks Refund Scammed Money?

Your bank may refund money from a scam depending on the type of scam and bank policies.
Contact your bank immediately if you suspect unauthorized transactions or money missing from your account, advises the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. You’ll need to notify your bank within 60 days after your bank sends your statement showing the unauthorized transactions. If you wait longer, you could owe the full amount of any transactions that occurred after the 60-day period and before notifying your bank, according to the CFPB.
Once you notify the bank, it has 10 business days to investigate the issue, and the bank has three business days to report its findings to you. If the bank can’t complete the investigation within 10 business days, it may issue a temporary credit to your account while it continues to investigate. The bank must then resolve the issue in 45 days, but in certain cases, you could wait up to 90 days.
With fraudulent checks, deposits could later be reversed, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. You’ll need to pursue the person who gave you the check if you want to be reimbursed.

If you think you have been the target of a scam or you have been scammed, you should Contact Us NOW!!!

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What happens if I Already Paid an Illegitimate Debt Collector? https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/what-happens-if-i-already-paid-an-illegitimate-debt-collector/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-happens-if-i-already-paid-an-illegitimate-debt-collector https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/what-happens-if-i-already-paid-an-illegitimate-debt-collector/#respond Sun, 10 Sep 2023 19:28:04 +0000 https://www.broadoak-capital.com/?p=3037 What happens if I Already Paid an Illegitimate Debt Collector?

Scammers can be very persuasive in convincing you to send them money. If you’ve already paid a fraudulent debt collector, your best bet is to seek recourse with the bank or financial institution you used to send the money. For example, if you paid the illegitimate collector with a credit card or debit card, contact […]

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What happens if I Already Paid an Illegitimate Debt Collector?

Scammers can be very persuasive in convincing you to send them money. If you’ve already paid a fraudulent debt collector, your best bet is to seek recourse with the bank or financial institution you used to send the money. For example, if you paid the illegitimate collector with a credit card or debit card, contact the bank that issued the card, inform them the charge is fraudulent and ask them to reverse the charges.
You may have a reasonable expectation of getting your money back if you paid by credit card or debit card, as federal laws protect you from fraudulent charges:

  • For credit cards: Under the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA), your liability is limited to $50, but most credit card companies offer zero-dollar liability protection, which means you’re not liable for fraudulent charges. Once fraud is detected, the false charges are returned to your account.
  • For debit cards: The Electronic Funds Transfer Act protects your liability against fraudulent charges, but you must act fast. If you report the fraudulent payment within two business days, you may owe a maximum of $50. If you report the charge between two business days and 60 calendar days from the date of the fraud, your liability increases to $500. Once 60 days pass, your liability is unlimited, meaning your entire payment might be forfeited.

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How To Avoid Cryptocurrency Scams https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/how-to-avoid-cryptocurrency-scams/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-avoid-cryptocurrency-scams https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/how-to-avoid-cryptocurrency-scams/#respond Sat, 09 Sep 2023 18:02:19 +0000 https://www.broadoak-capital.com/?p=3009 How To Avoid Cryptocurrency Scams

Scammers are always finding new ways to steal your money using cryptocurrency. To steer clear of a crypto con, here are some things to know. Only scammers demand payment in cryptocurrency. No legitimate business is going to demand you send cryptocurrency in advance – not to buy something, and not to protect your money. That’s always a […]

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How To Avoid Cryptocurrency Scams

Scammers are always finding new ways to steal your money using cryptocurrency. To steer clear of a crypto con, here are some things to know.

  • Only scammers demand payment in cryptocurrency. No legitimate business is going to demand you send cryptocurrency in advance – not to buy something, and not to protect your money. That’s always a scam.
  • Only scammers will guarantee profits or big returns. Don’t trust people who promise you can quickly and easily make money in the crypto markets.
  • Never mix online dating and investment advice. If you meet someone on a dating site or app, and they want to show you how to invest in crypto, or asks you to send them crypto, that’s a scam.

Spot crypto-related scams

Scammers are using some tried and true scam tactics — only now they’re demanding payment in cryptocurrency. Investment scams are one of the top ways scammers trick you into buying cryptocurrency and sending it on to scammers. But scammers are also impersonating businesses, government agencies, and a love interest, among other tactics.

Investment scams

Investment scams often promise you can “make lots of money” with “zero risk,” and often start on social media or online dating apps or sites. These scams can, of course, start with an unexpected text, email, or call, too. And, with investment scams, crypto is central in two ways: it can be both the investment and the payment.
Here are some common investment scams, and how to spot them.

  • A so-called “investment manager” contacts you out of the blue. They promise to grow your money — but only if you buy cryptocurrency and transfer it into their online account. The investment website they steer you to looks real, but it’s really fake, and so are their promises. If you log in to your “investment account,” you won’t be able to withdraw your money at all, or only if you pay high fees.
  • A scammer pretends to be a celebrity who can multiply any cryptocurrency you send them. But celebrities aren’t contacting you through social media. It’s a scammer. And if you click on an unexpected link they send or send cryptocurrency to a so-called celebrity’s QR code, that money will go straight to a scammer and it’ll be gone.
  • An online “love interest” wants you to send money or cryptocurrency to help you invest. That’s a scam. As soon as someone you meet on a dating site or app asks you for money, or offers you investment advice, know this: that’s a scammer. The advice and offers to help you invest in cryptocurrency are nothing but scams. If you send them crypto, or money of any kind, it’ll be gone, and you typically won’t get it back.
  • Scammers guarantee that you’ll make money or promise big payouts with guaranteed returns. Nobody can make those guarantees. Much less in a short time. And there’s nothing “low risk” about cryptocurrency investments. So: if a company or person promises you’ll make a profit, that’s a scam. Even if there’s a celebrity endorsement or testimonials from happy investors. Those are easily faked.
  • Scammers promise free money. They’ll promise free cash or cryptocurrency, but free money promises are always fake.
  •  Scammers make big claims without details or explanations. No matter what the investment, find out how it works and ask questions about where your money is going. Honest investment managers or advisors want to share that information and will back it up with details.

Before you invest in crypto, search online for the name of the company or person and the cryptocurrency name, plus words like “review,” “scam,” or “complaint.” See what others are saying. And read more about other common investment scams.

Business, government, and job impersonators

In a business, government, or job impersonator scam, the scammer pretends to be someone you trust to convince you to send them money by buying and sending cryptocurrency.

    Scammers impersonate well-known companies. These come in waves, and scammers might say they’re from Amazon, Microsoft, FedEx, your bank, or many others. They’ll text, call, email, or send messages on social media — or maybe put a pop-up alert on your computer. They might say there’s fraud on your account, or your money is at risk — and to fix it, you need to buy crypto and send it to them. But that’s a scam. If you click the link in any message, answer the call, or call back the number on the pop-up, you’ll be connected to a scammer.

  • Scammers impersonate new or established businesses offering fraudulent crypto coins or tokens. They’ll say the company is entering the crypto world by issuing their own coin or token. They might create social media ads, news articles or a slick website to back it all up and trick people into buying. But these crypto coins and tokens are a scam that ends up stealing money from the people who buy them. Research online to find out whether a company has issued a coin or token. It will be widely reported in established media if it is true. 
  • Scammers impersonate government agencies, law enforcement, or utility companies. They might say there’s a legal problem, that you owe money, or your accounts or benefits are frozen as part of an investigation. They tell you to solve the problem or protect your money by buying cryptocurrency. They might say to send it to a wallet address they give you — for “safe keeping.” Some scammers even stay on the phone with you as they direct you to a cryptocurrency ATM and give step-by-step instruction on how to insert money and convert it to cryptocurrency. They’ll direct you to send the crypto by scanning a QR code they give you, which directs the payment right into their digital wallet — and then it’s gone.
  • Scammers list fake jobs on job sites. They might even send unsolicited job offers related to crypto like jobs helping recruit investors, selling or mining cryptocurrency, or helping convert cash to crypto. But these so-called “jobs” only start if you pay a fee in cryptocurrency. Which is always a scam, every time. As your first task in your “job,” these scammers send you a check to deposit into your bank account. (That check will turn out to be fake.) They’ll tell you to withdraw some of that money, buy cryptocurrency for a made-up “client,” and send it to a crypto account they give you. But if you do, the money will be gone, and you’ll be on the hook to repay that money to your bank.

To avoid business, government, and job impersonators, know that

  • No legitimate business or government will ever email, text, or message you on social media to ask for money. And they will never demand that you buy or pay with cryptocurrency.
  • Never click on a link from an unexpected text, email, or social media message, even if it seems to come from a company you know.
  • Don’t pay anyone who contacts you unexpectedly, demanding payment with cryptocurrency.
  • Never pay a fee to get a job. If someone asks you to pay upfront for a job or says to buy cryptocurrency as part of your job, it’s a scam.

Blackmail scams

Scammers might send emails or U.S. mail to your home saying they have embarrassing or compromising photos, videos, or personal information about you. Then, they threaten to make it public unless you pay them in cryptocurrency. Don’t do it. This is blackmail and a criminal extortion attempt.

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How to spot spam Facebook posts to avoid accidentally sharing scams https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/how-to-spot-spam-facebook-posts-to-avoid-accidentally-sharing-scams/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-spot-spam-facebook-posts-to-avoid-accidentally-sharing-scams https://www.broadoak-capital.com/blog/how-to-spot-spam-facebook-posts-to-avoid-accidentally-sharing-scams/#respond Sat, 09 Sep 2023 17:27:20 +0000 https://www.broadoak-capital.com/?p=2997 How to spot spam Facebook posts to avoid accidentally sharing scams

Scammers are using fake stories to prey on victims and trick them into sharing scams on Facebook. This scam has been going on for a while, but it continues to trip people up by using sad posts to appeal to their emotions. How it works You see a Facebook post with an emotional story, so you […]

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How to spot spam Facebook posts to avoid accidentally sharing scams

Scammers are using fake stories to prey on victims and trick them into sharing scams on Facebook.
This scam has been going on for a while, but it continues to trip people up by using sad posts to appeal to their emotions.

How it works

You see a Facebook post with an emotional story, so you share it on your profile. More and more people share this post until it has a far reach. When this happens, the scammer edits the post to show a scam with phishing links.

There are several variations of this post that are popular right now. Some spotted on Facebook in recent days include a stolen trailer, a child and a dog who ran away and are missing, and a found injured dog.

These posts are commonly edited to later show a contest with a link to enter or a home for rent with a link to apply. The scammers tend to wait a few days or weeks before making the edit. Since you shared the original post, the edited one is on your profile, advertising the scam to your friends, and you may have no idea.

What to look for

Many missing pet posts are legitimate, so don’t let this scam stop you from sharing posts, but look for signs of a spammer before hitting share.
These scam posts are found in groups that are public, and the original poster will usually turn the comments off.

Speaking of the poster – take a look at their profile. How new is the profile? How many friends does the person have? Where does it say they live? This information could offer clues as to if the profile is legitimate.
Also, many of these missing posts are copied and pasted with only the location changed, so if you aren’t sure, look up the post and see if it’s been posted by other people in other areas. 

One that has been making its rounds for the past few months is about a child with autism running off with a dog named Hank. The photo is either a boy and a dog, or a boy and a girl with a dog. A search of the text brings up dozens of posts with the same few photos, all from different posters and posted in groups around the country.

The posts are vague – they always include a city or county or not an exact area where the so-called missing child left from. If a child is reported missing from your area in a post, check the news and social media accounts of nearby law enforcement agencies to see if they are reporting the missing child.
What to do if you spot one of these posts
If you run into a similar post and believe it may not be legitimate, do not share it and report it to Facebook and the BBB.
If you have already shared the post, delete it from your profile.

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