Familiarize yourself with these common swindles.
You receive a call or email from someone claiming to be from a financial institution or federal/state agency (e.g., IRS, Federal Reserve, FBI) saying that your financial accounts are at risk of fraud. They instruct you to move your funds to a new account they provide to you, coach you on how to answer questions from your financial institution and instruct you not to tell anyone.
Before paying a contractor for work at your home, investing in a company or purchasing a new property, a fraudster intercepts the email communication and replaces legitimate payment instructions with fraudulent ones. Red flags include last-minute changes to instructions, a change in the tone or word choice from prior emails, a new sender address and multiple payment requests. With this scam, the email account belonging to you, the service provider or both has been compromised.
Someone calls pretending to be from a major tech company and says that your computer has a virus. They offer to get rid of it by asking you to log into a website that lets the caller control your computer. The caller can then steal your ID information and can gain access to your accounts.
Your grandchild or child calls and frantically requests money to pay a kidnapper, a legal bill or an emergency medical expense – and begs you not to tell anyone. But it’s not real: Fraudsters commonly pose as loved ones and, preying on your compassion, claim to need money urgently. Recent technology can even allow them to successfully imitate your loved one’s voice.
You donate to one charity and end up on every charity list. That’s because they sell your name, phone number and email to other nonprofit and commercial organizations. These could include companies with similar names to charities you support – but they exist solely to scam donations.
You get an unsolicited phone call or email saying you’ve won a large prize. All you need to do is send money to pay for shipping, taxes or some other fee before the prize can be released to you. You send the money, but the fictional prize never arrives.
If you own a timeshare, you may get a call from someone claiming they’re authorized to sell it for you, for a fee. After paying, however, you never hear from them again.
You get an unsolicited call or knock at the door offering a product or service for a discounted price (e.g., heart monitor, wheelchair, bathtub bench, home maintenance, tree trimming). You’re asked for a deposit or prepayment and the product never arrives or the work is never completed.
You’re approached by a “professional” who claims your home is under threat of foreclosure and offers to pay off your mortgage or taxes if you sign over the deed to the property. Or, you receive a call from your electric company threatening to turn off services unless payment is made immediately.
These predators claim to care deeply for you or your well-being. After spending weeks and months winning your trust, they may gain access to your accounts to steal money or your identity information. They may also ask you to accept money on their behalf followed by a request to send those funds to another location.
These scams are common and widespread. Keep these additional tips in mind to protect your identity and your accounts:
If you suspect you’ve fallen victim to a scam or that your identity has been compromised, it’s time to act. Report the incident to your advisor right away to help protect your accounts, and consult identitytheft.gov to see the Federal Trade Commission’s recommendations for critical next steps. Additionally, reporting cybercrime incidents to the FBI can help federal agencies respond quicker and more effectively to threats.