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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Friday, October 17, 2008

"It's Me!" Scam Update

Japan continues to have problems with a type of fraud known as furikome sagi (translatable as "Transfer the Money Now!" Fraud) in which someone of dubious character calls an elderly person up and pretends to be their grandson, suddenly in need of money to pay back a loan to a yakuza gangster, or tells them that a family member has committed some wrongdoing and will get into trouble unless money is transferred to the following account immediately. One enterprising fraudster even posed as an agent for the National Tax Agency on the phone, carefully walking an elderly victim through the steps needed to transfer her life savings to them under the guise of helping her pay her taxes. The National Police Agency has declared October to be "Elimination of Bank Fraud Month" and has assigned 60,000 officers to stand guard at banks and talk to elderly customers that come in to make sure they're not being swindled. Japanese "cash corners" (as ATMs are sometimes called) have been updated to display messages warning against the dangers of bank fraud, too. The new measures seem to be helping somewhat, although 16 of the 94 reported bank fraud cases so far this month happened right under the noses of police officers standing guard, including a poor elderly woman who was fooled into transferring $28,000 to an unknown bank account. Japan is a very conservative society when it comes to saving, and seniors on average have $200,000 in cash, twice the $100,000 the average household has saved, which is still a huge amount.

osaka

7 Comments:

Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Is there anything like this? Some kind of scam that preys on older people? I certainly hope not.

9:47 PM

 
Blogger orcalee said...

Yep...I'm from Taiwan and this is also common here, and not limited to elderly victims, too. Sometimes a scammer will call pretending to be a kidnapper with crying sounds in the background ("Mama! Help!~"), and many a worried parents fall for that (wouldn't you..).

10:15 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

It's terrible. They should have rules like a) no large transfers to any account that has been opened recently, b) everyone withdrawing their money will get a fingerprint and photo taken, and c) large withdraws that were recently received will randomly be flagged as "please see teller" and these transactions must be done face to face, no ATM.

12:20 AM

 
OpenID zenton said...

The same frauds are a problem here in Germany. well almost the same. the "grandsons" mostly dont tell they are threatened by yakuzas i think...

12:48 AM

 
Blogger theillien said...

This is definitely not an isolated problem. There are scams like this in the US as well. Anecdotatally speaking, it seems to happen more in Florida than most other places. This is likely due to the large retiree population in Florida.

4:30 AM

 
Blogger orcalee said...

The scammers' accounts are most likely collected from various 'heads', so they're not necessarily recently-opened. Police here in Taiwan recommend a tactic whenever you encounter one of there scammers, and that is to transfer $1 (Taiwan dollar, it's about 3 yen or so), that way the authorities can "lock" this account and render it useless for scammers. It works to curb small-time scammers, but maybe not for organized crime scammers...oh well...

11:14 PM

 
Blogger PeterD said...

In America, it is more common to ave someone come and offer to repair the roof of the house or similar, and do little (if anything) while charging a lot.

1:06 AM

 

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