INTERPOL Operation Disrupts Social Engineering Scams
June 17, 2022
A worldwide
crackdown on social engineering fraud has seen scammers
identified globally, substantial criminal assets seized and
new investigative leads triggered in every continent.
The two-month (8
March – 8 May 2022) Operation, codenamed First Light 2022,
saw 76 countries take part in an international clampdown on
the organized crime groups behind telecommunications and
social engineering scams.
Police in
participating countries raided national call centres
suspected of telecommunications or scamming fraud,
particularly telephone deception, romance scams, e-mail
deception, and connected financial crime.
Although
results
are still coming in, preliminary figures
reached so far include:
- 1,770
locations raided worldwide
- Some
3,000 suspects identified
- Some
2,000 operators, fraudsters and money launderers
arrested
- Some
4,000 bank accounts frozen
- Some USD
50 million worth of illicit funds intercepted
Social engineering
fraud refers to scams which manipulate or trick
people into giving out confidential or personal
information which can then be used for criminal
financial gain.
Tangible
results
Based on
intelligence exchanged in the framework of the operation,
the Singapore Police Force rescued a teenage scam victim who
had been tricked into pretending to be kidnapped, sending
videos of himself with fake wounds to his parents and
seeking a EUR 1.5 million ransom.
A Chinese
national wanted in connection with a Ponzi scheme estimated
to have defrauded nearly 24,000 victims out of EUR 34
million was arrested in Papua New Guinea and returned to
China via Singapore.
Get-rich-quick schemes
With the
Internet creating new online career prospects, companies and
professionals who turn to e-commerce affiliate and EBShopp
business opportunities are increasingly being scammed.
As part of
Operation First Light 2022, the Singapore Police Force
arrested eight suspects linked to Ponzi-like job scams.
Scammers would offer high-paying online marketing jobs via
social media and messaging systems where victims would
initially make small earnings, and subsequently be required
to recruit more members to earn commissions.
Making the
case: INTERPOL police capabilities
Emerging
trends uncovered during operations were shared with member
countries in the form of INTERPOL purple notices detailing:
- the way
money mule herders are laundering money through the
personal bank accounts of victims;
- how
social media platforms are driving human trafficking,
entrapping people into forced labour, sexual slavery, or
captivity in casinos or on fishing vessels;
- an
increase in vishing fraud with criminals pretending to
be bank officials to trick victims into sharing online
log-in details;
- a growth
in cybercriminals posing as INTERPOL officials to obtain
money from victims believing themselves to be under
investigation.
“Telecom and BEC fraud are
sources of serious concern for many countries and
have a hugely damaging effect on economies,
businesses and communities.”
Rory Corcoran, Director
of INTERPOL’s Financial Crime and Anti-Corruption
Centre (IFCACC).
“The
international nature of these crimes can only be addressed
successfully by law enforcement working together beyond
borders, which is why INTERPOL is critical to providing
police the world over with a coordinated tactical response,”
added Mr Corcoran.
“The
transnational and digital nature of different types of
telecom and social engineering fraud continues to present
grave challenges for local police authorities, because
perpetrators operate from a different country or even
continent than their victims and keep updating their fraud
schemes,” said Duan Daqi, Head of the INTERPOL National
Central Bureau in Beijing.
“INTERPOL provides a unique platform for police cooperation
to address this challenge. Though Operation Firstlight 2022
is concluded, our collective law enforcement efforts will
continue as the crimes persist,” added Mr Duan.
To identify
the criminal assets that would require interception during
tactical operations, countries shared intelligence via
INTERPOL’s secure global police communications network
I-24/7 ahead of time, feeding INTERPOL’s Financial Crimes
Analysis File with data on suspects, suspicious bank
accounts, unlawful transactions and communications means
such as telephone numbers, email addresses, fraudulent
websites and IP addresses.
An annual
operation launched in 2014, First Light 2022 was carried out
with the financial support of China’s Ministry of Public
Security.
Whilst
initial First Light operations took place across Southeast
Asia, this 2022 edition marks the second time law
enforcement has coordinated First Light on a global scale,
with tactical operations taking place on every continent.
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