The FBI released the below
information:
Internet-enabled crimes and scams
show no signs of letting up, according to data released by the FBI’s Internet Crime
Complaint Center (IC3) in its 2019 Internet Crime Report. The last
calendar year saw both the highest number of complaints and the highest dollar
losses reported since the center was established in May 2000.
IC3 received 467,361 complaints in
2019—an average of nearly 1,300 every day—and recorded more than $3.5 billion
in losses to individual and business victims. The most frequently reported
complaints were phishing and similar ploys, non-payment/non-delivery scams, and
extortion. The most financially costly complaints involved business email
compromise, romance or
confidence fraud, and spoofing, or mimicking the account of a person
or vendor known to the victim to gather personal or financial information.
Donna Gregory, the chief of IC3, said
that in 2019 the center didn’t see an uptick in new types of fraud but rather
saw criminals deploying new tactics and techniques to carry out existing scams.
“Criminals are getting so
sophisticated,” Gregory said. “It is getting harder and harder for victims to
spot the red flags and tell real from fake.”
While email is still a common entry
point, frauds are also beginning on text messages—a crime called smishing—or
even fake websites—a tactic called pharming.
“You may get a text message that
appears to be your bank asking you to verify information on your account,” said
Gregory. “Or you may even search a service online and inadvertently end up on a
fraudulent site that gathers your bank or credit card information.”
Individuals need to be extremely
skeptical and double check everything, Gregory emphasized. “In the same way
your bank and online accounts have started to require two-factor
authentication—apply that to your life,” she said. “Verify requests in person
or by phone, double check web and email addresses, and don’t follow the links
provided in any messages.”
Business email compromise (BEC), or
email account compromise, has been a major concern for years. In 2019, IC3
recorded 23,775 complaints about BEC, which resulted in more than $1.7 billion
in losses.
These scams typically involve a
criminal spoofing or mimicking a legitimate email address. For example, an individual
will receive a message that appears to be from an executive within their
company or a business with which an individual has a relationship. The email
will request a payment, wire transfer, or gift card purchase that seems
legitimate but actually funnels money directly to a criminal.
In the last year, IC3 reported
seeing an increase in the number of BEC complaints related to the diversion of
payroll funds. “In this type of scheme, a company’s human resources or payroll
department receives an email appearing to be from an employee requesting to
update their direct deposit information for the current pay period,” the report
said. The change instead routes an employee’s paycheck to a criminal.
“Information reported to the IC3 plays a vital
role in the FBI’s ability to understand our cyber adversaries and their
motives, which, in turn, helps us to impose risks and consequences on those who
break our laws and threaten our national security,” said Matt Gorham, assistant
director of the FBI’s Cyber Division. “It is through these efforts we hope to
build a safer and more secure cyber landscape.” Gorham encourages everyone to
use IC3 and reach out to their local field office to report malicious
activity.
Rapid reporting can help law
enforcement stop fraudulent transactions before a victim loses the money for
good. The FBI’s Recovery Asset Team was created to streamline communication
with financial institutions and FBI field offices and is continuing to build on
its success. The team successfully recovered more than $300 million for victims
in 2019.
Besides stressing vigilance on the
part of every connected citizen, the IC3’s Donna Gregory also stressed the
importance of victims providing as much information as possible when they come
to IC3. Victims should include every piece of information they have—any email
addresses, account information they were given, phone numbers scammers called
from, and other details. The more information IC3 can gather, the more it helps
combat the criminals.
In 2019, the Recovery Asset Team was
paired with the Money Mule
Team under the IC3’s Recovery and Investigative Development Team. This effort
brings together law enforcement and financial institutions to use the data
provided in IC3 complaints to gain a better view of the networks and methods of
cyber fraudsters and identify the perpetrators.
The new effort allowed IC3 to
aggregate more than three years of reports to help build a case against an
active group of criminals who were responsible for damaging crimes that ranged
from cryptocurrency theft to online extortion. The ensuing investigation by the
FBI’s San Francisco Field Office resulted in the arrest of three people.
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