"UK Man Sentenced to 13 Years for Running Multi-Million Fraud Website"

A man has recently been sentenced to 13 years and four months for running a multi-million-dollar fraud website that led to at least $124.2m being stolen globally.  Of this, $53.4m was taken from UK victims.  Law enforcement believes the actual losses to be far higher because fraud is a heavily underreported crime.  Tejay Fletcher, 35, from London, UK, was handed the jail term after pleading guilty to charges of making or supplying articles for use in fraud, encouraging or assisting the commission of an offense, possessing criminal property, and transferring criminal property.  The crimes took place between November 30, 2020, and November 8, 2022.  The sentence followed a large international law enforcement operation led by London’s Metropolitan Police in coordination with the City of London Police, the National Crime Agency, Europol, Eurojust, Dutch authorities, and the FBI.  The police noted that while Fletcher was not directly responsible for the scams, his website offered tools for hire that enabled its users to launch sophisticated financial scams.  Criminals used the service’s technology to pose as representatives of banks, including Barclays, Santander, HSBC, Lloyds, and Halifax.  They would call members of the public to warn of suspicious activity on their accounts, and ask them to disclose sensitive security information, such as one-time passcodes, to access their money.  The police stated that the software allowed users to mask their phone numbers to trick victims into believing they were calling from their bank.  iSpoof users could choose from a number of packages, allowing them to purchase the number of minutes they wanted to use the software for in Bitcoin.  The police said that at its peak, the site had 59,000 registered users.  Before it was shut down in November 2022, iSpoof was growing at a rate of 700 new users every week.  In the 12 months until August 2022, around 10 million fraudulent calls were made globally via iSpoof, with roughly 3.5 million of those made in the UK.

 

Infosecurity reports: "UK Man Sentenced to 13 Years for Running Multi-Million Fraud Website"

Submitted by Anonymous on