Friday, Oct 17, 2008
Posted on Fri, Oct. 17, 2008
Ignore those suspicious e-mails, and send them to the feds
DAVE LIEBER
A retired Benbrook man received an e-mail this month from FBI Director Robert Mueller. Don Gerik says the top G-man asked for his help in recovering $10 million from Nigeria that was secretly deposited in an overseas bank account in his name. While the e-mail wanted his help, it also raised suspicions about him.
"If you are not a terrorist, then why did you not receive the money directly into your account?" it asked.
The e-mail showed the FBIs J. Edgar Hoover Building in Washington, D.C., but the wording was often garbled and sometimes made no sense. Gerik noticed that the e-mails display address was
robertmueller@fbi.gov, but the reply-to address shows that an answer would go somewhere else.
His gut told him that an FBI director wouldnt be e-mailing him if he was suspected of laundering millions of dollars overseas for terrorist operations.
"I would think the FBI would be knocking on my door instead of sending me an e-mail," he said.
Fake FBI scams are well-documented on the Internet. The best source, of course, is the FBI, obviously unhappy that scammers are co-opting its name.
The FBI steers inquiries about cyber-related crimes to its partner agency, the Internet Crime Complaint Center (known as IC3). The public is asked to forward fraudulent spam e-mails and other suspected illegal Internet activity so investigators can study and catalog them.
This year, IC3 sent an "Intelligence Note" advisory to law enforcement agencies and the public warning about fake e-mails that "give the appearance of legitimacy due to the usage of pictures of the FBI Director, seal, letterhead and banners." In bold lettering, the advisory stated, "THE FBI DOES NOT SEND EMAILS SOLICITING INFORMATION FROM CITIZENS."
The Watchdog asked Kevin Kolbye, assistant special-agent-in-charge of the Dallas office, to examine the Benbrook mans e-mail. Kolbye quickly found errors:
The FBI does not send out letters endorsing financial schemes.
The letter claims to come from the FBIs "Anti-Terrorist and Monitary Division." Kolbye says there is no such division.
Other references to organizations and methods are made up, such as S.T.D.P., which the e-mail claims stands for Secret Diplomatic Payments, the FBI Bank Commission for Europe and the World Wide Commission. None of these exist.
The FBI agent suggested that anyone receiving the e-mail could do Internet searches for the above references and quickly learn that the note has no credibility.
The goal of an e-mail like this is to solicit personal information such as name, address, bank account number and routing number, which allows money to be removed from someones bank account.
"On average, were receiving about 20,000 complaints a month that have to do with e-mail scams, identity theft, auction frauds and other cyber-related crimes," Kolbye said of IC3, which works with other police agencies to prosecute.
Gerik, the Benbrook retiree, is off the hook. No, the FBI is not coming after him. But others get unnerved when something like this arrives in their inbox.
When enough complaints pile up, IC3 starts an investigation. The key is building the number of complaints to attract investigators attention.
The investigators at
www.ic3.gov want to know who is bothering you. Believe it or not, there are people who actually want you to forward your worst spam to them.
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What to do
Forward troubling e-mails to
www.ic3.gov. You can also reach the Internet Crime Complaint Center through
www.fbi.gov.
Remember that if the opportunity appears too good to be true, it usually is.
Never reply to e-mails asking for banking information.
Be wary of individuals representing themselves as foreign government officials. Be cautious when dealing with individuals outside the country.
Beware when asked to assist in placing large sums of money in overseas bank accounts. Do not believe the promise of money for your cooperation.
Source: Internet Crime Complaint Center