The FBI released the below information:
Beginning in 2015, the
Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) forwarded multiple complaints to the
FBI’s Houston Field Office regarding fraudulent offers of investment
opportunities by perpetrators who impersonated U.S. bank officials and
financial consultants over the Internet and telephone. Victims in various
countries, including the U.S., were deceived into believing they would receive
millions of dollars from joint ventures with certain U.S. banks if they paid
up-front fees—ranging from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of
dollars—to participate. According to court documents, victims lost more than $7
million collectively in this scam.
The complaints submitted by
victims to the IC3 helped investigators uncover this elaborate international
advance fee and money laundering scheme, and in February of this year, six
individuals were federally charged in Houston in connection with the scam.
The IC3, which has received
more than 4 million victim complaints from 2000 through 2017, routinely
analyzes complaints like these and disseminates data to the appropriate law
enforcement agencies at all levels for possible investigation. The IC3 also works
to identify general trends related to current and emerging Internet-facilitated
crimes, and it publicizes those findings through periodic alerts and an annual
report.
And today, the IC3 is
releasing its latest annual publication—the 2017 Internet Crime Report—which
reveals that the center received more than 300,000 complaints last year with
reported losses of more than $1.4 billion.
If you use the Internet, the
2017 Internet Crime Report is a document you should read carefully. You’ll
learn a great deal, including:
What the most common crime
types reported by victims were (the top three were non-payment and non-delivery,
personal data breaches, and phishing/vishing/smishing/pharming scams);
What the most common crime
types in terms of dollar loss were (top three were business e-mail
compromise/e-mail account compromise, non-payment/non-delivery, and investment
scams);
How the IC3 is monitoring
trending scams such as business e-mail compromise, ransomware, tech support
fraud, elder fraud, and extortion;
Which age groups are more
likely to be victimized by Internet-facilitated criminal activity (people over
60 rank number one in terms of victimization and dollar losses);
What victims can do after
reporting the crime to the IC3 (take steps to block or freeze bank or credit
card accounts, dispute charges, attempt recovery of lost funds, etc.);
Where each U.S. state ranks
in terms of the number of victims of Internet-facilitated frauds, dollar
losses, and criminal subjects (California has the top spot on all three lists,
while Texas and Florida take turns at the number two and number three slots on
the lists); and
Which IC3 initiatives
directly support law enforcement (remote search capability of its database
available to all sworn officers, and the Operation Wellspring initiative, which
helps build state and local law enforcement’s cyber investigative
capabilities).
The success of the
above-mentioned Houston investigation is just one example of the impact that
the IC3 can have on Internet-facilitated criminal activity—and proof positive
that the short amount of time it takes individuals who think they have been
scammed to go the IC3 website and submit a complaint form is well worth it.
“We want to encourage
everyone who suspects they have been victimized by online fraudsters to report
it to us,” says IC3 chief Donna Gregory. “The more data we have, the more
effective we can be in raising public awareness, reducing the number of victims
who fall prey to these schemes, and increasing the number of criminals who are
identified and brought to justice.”
In conjunction with today’s
release of the IC3’s 2017 Internet Crime Report and in support of the center’s
#StopCyberCrime campaign, the FBI is releasing a 30-second video public service
announcement (PSA) featuring actress Kirsten Vangsness, who plays a tech-savvy
FBI analyst on the current television program Criminal Minds.
The PSA is intended to
promote awareness of Internet crimes and scams—like business e-mail compromise,
ransomware, tech support fraud, non-payment/non-delivery, hacking, and
phishing—and encourages the public to report suspected criminal cyber activity
to the IC3.
You can read the report via the below link:
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