Internet, post and phone providers told to get tough on scams
Internet providers, postal services and telephone companies should be doing more to help stamp out scams and bring the culprits to book, Citizens Advice said today.The national charity warns that as people’s shopping habits change and more transactions are carried out over the phone, by mail order and online, rogues are increasingly using these channels to target users with scams costing UK consumers an estimated £3.5 billion a year.
As the Trading Standards Institute’s national consumer week gets underway, Citizens Advice is calling on providers of internet, mail and phone services to pull the plug on scams, and to help the enforcement authorities trace the perpetrators.
It homes in on three common scams regularly reported to Citizens Advice Bureaux:
Letters containing a huge mock cheque saying you have won a big prize and asking you to send a fee so it can be processed
Phone calls congratulating you on your winnings and milking you for more and more fees
Email scams asking you to confirm your account details
Citizens Advice consumer affairs policy officer Susan Marks said: “Internet service providers, postal and telephone services could all be doing more to police their own environment better. We want to see them working together and joining forces with the enforcement agencies to find ways to stamp out scams that make use of their networks to con their customers.
“Scamsters are clever and trained to convince the people they target. They often help cover their tracks by persuading victims not to tell anyone.”
In one recent case, a 70 year old visually impaired CAB client lost £100 making premium rate calls on a number he had to ring to collect fictitious ‘prizes’ he was told he had won in a series of letters. He had also sent £20 in ‘fees’.
In another case, a CAB client was so convinced the winnings he was claiming on the internet were real that he was prepared to use savings and to borrow to pay what seemed like insignificant fees compared to the prize money of £1.5 million. The upfront fees were almost £2,000
Not only are people conned out of their savings, they also face the spectre of identity theft.
For example an 84 year old CAB client received a cheque in the post for 11,000 euros, claiming to be winnings from a Spanish lottery. Her bank later notified her that the cheque was false and that the bank details she had provided to claim the money had allowed the scamsters to withdraw £7,000 from her account. She is now in debt.
“If something looks too good to be true, it probably is,” Susan Marks warned “Remember you can’t win a prize if you didn’t enter a competition, and you can’t win the lottery if you didn’t buy a ticket. Never pay money up front – if you really have won something any fees can be deducted from your winnings. We would urge people to get their own back and make sure they report scams. If you are not sure who to complain to, get advice from Consumer Direct or your local CAB.”