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in Tech Support Scams
afr.com
· 2025-12-08
Tinder is expanding its identity verification program across the US, UK, Brazil, and Mexico to address rising crime on dating apps and combat AI-generated fake profiles. The verification feature, already tested in Australia and New Zealand, showed that verified users received 67% more matches than unverified users. The expansion aims to help users distinguish authentic profiles from fraudulent ones in an era of increasingly sophisticated deepfakes and AI impersonation.
shrm.org
· 2025-12-08
**Deepfake Scams Expose Employers to Big Risks**
Employers face significant fraud risks from AI-generated deepfake technology, which is already being used in workplace scams. Organizations need to implement awareness and protective measures against AI-powered fraud to safeguard employees and company assets.
hard-drive.net
· 2025-12-08
**Summary:**
This is a satirical piece using the video game Animal Crossing as an allegory for financial manipulation and debt. The author describes how the character Tom Nook lured them to a virtual island paradise with promises of meaning and escape from capitalism, then systematically trapped them in escalating debt (over 500,000 bells) through housing costs and merchant fees while they performed all the labor. The piece serves as humorous commentary on how emotional vulnerability and desire for a better life can make anyone susceptible to manipulation, regardless of intelligence.
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-08
A South Hills woman lost $10,000 in a sophisticated Bitcoin scam after receiving a fake "hacking alert" pop-up that directed her to call a number where scammers impersonating Microsoft and bank representatives claimed her account was compromised and threatened her with child pornography charges. Pittsburgh police reported at least three victims in total, including two women in their 70s who lost $22,000 and $7,000 respectively through the same scheme, which exploited urgency and fear to pressure victims into withdrawing cash and purchasing Bitcoin. Police warned that scammers use legitimate-sounding company names and call transfers to appear credible, and advised that once cryptocurrency money is transferred, recovery
candgnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel will host a free educational presentation on February 26 at the Madison Heights Active Adult Center to address common scams targeting senior citizens. The discussion covers imposter scams where con artists pose as relatives, utility workers, government officials, or romantic interests, often using artificial intelligence and creating false urgency to pressure victims into sending money via untraceable methods like gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency. Authorities recommend seniors verify caller identities through independent contact information, never share personal financial details without confirmation, and report suspected scams to local police or the Federal Trade Commission.
949whom.com
· 2025-12-08
This article discusses prevalent scams affecting New Hampshire residents, with the author highlighting how scam artists exploit older adults who lack technological training. The piece opens with a personal anecdote about the author's father nearly falling victim to a phishing scam impersonating the post office that attempted to steal banking information, noting that such fraud costs people millions of dollars annually across the state.
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Two older Pittsburgh women lost a combined $29,000 in a tech support scam where fraudsters impersonated Apple customer service representatives and convincing them their devices were hacked, pressuring them to purchase Bitcoin at local convenience stores. A 70-year-old victim withdrew $22,000 and a 72-year-old victim purchased $7,000 in Bitcoin after being transferred between scammers posing as Apple and bank fraud specialists. Pittsburgh police are investigating and warn the public that legitimate tech companies never contact customers about device problems or ask them to call numbers or click links, recommending victims report incidents to local police or the FTC.
indiatoday.in
· 2025-12-08
A 58-year-old Kolkata man lost Rs 20 lakh after enrolling in a free online stock trading course advertised on Facebook, which turned out to be a cyber fraud scheme. The scammers added him to WhatsApp and Telegram groups, provided fake stock tips and a counterfeit certificate, and convinced him to invest through a fraudulent platform called "Zoksa" that falsely showed profits of Rs 1 crore; when he attempted withdrawal, they demanded Rs 13 lakh in taxes before blocking further access. The victim, who needed funds for his and his son's cancer treatment, lost his entire savings and existing stock investments before filing a police complaint
businesstimes.com.sg
· 2025-12-08
Singapore reported a record 46,563 scam cases in 2023, representing a 46.8% increase from 2022, with victims losing S$651.8 million. Job scams were the most prevalent (9,914 cases; S$135.7 million lost), primarily targeting those aged 30-49 through WhatsApp and Telegram offers of work-from-home tasks, while fake friend call scams surged to 6,859 cases (S$23 million lost), disproportionately affecting adults aged 50-64. Contrary to common assumptions, 73% of victims were under age 50, with malware scams
straitstimes.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2023, Singapore reported a record high of 46,563 scam cases with victims losing $651.8 million, marking a 46.8 percent increase in cases from 2022 despite public warnings. Job scams were the most prevalent fraud type, followed by e-commerce scams (which more than doubled), with 73 percent of victims aged below 50, contrary to assumptions that elderly people are most vulnerable. The police attributed most scams to organized criminal groups operating transnationally and noted that 19 scam syndicates were dismantled in 2023 through international cooperation.
goldrushcam.com
· 2025-12-08
The Orange County Sheriff's Department issued a February 2024 awareness advisory warning residents about romance scams and various other fraud schemes, noting that scammers manipulate victims into believing they're in committed relationships to steal money and that criminal tactics evolve constantly. The advisory identified eight common scam types including text phishing, online employment fraud, tech support scams, and impersonation schemes (involving fake tax, utility, warrant, and arrest claims), and advised victims of financial fraud to immediately report incidents to their financial institutions and request new accounts.
collegiatetimes.com
· 2025-12-08
Virginia Tech has experienced an influx of phishing scams targeting university email accounts, primarily using social engineering tactics rather than system vulnerabilities to trick recipients into sharing personal information, money, or clicking malicious links. While misinformation claims the scams are new or that Outlook's security is ineffective, officials report the scams have persisted for years and Outlook has strong protective tools; notably, most victims have been students rather than older individuals. University officials recommend marking suspicious emails as phishing, verifying sender addresses through official staff lists, and reporting compromised accounts immediately.
wcnc.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2022, 70,000 Americans lost a record $1.3 billion to romance scams—nearly double the $547 million lost in 2021—with scammers increasingly using AI, deepfakes, and voice cloning to deceive victims. North Carolina ranked 9th nationally, with 422 victims losing $18 million that year, including a Hickory therapist who sent $50 to a scammer posing as an African man seeking help before recognizing manipulation tactics like emotional appeals, requests for money, and guilt-tripping. Key warning signs include requests for unorthodox payments, emotionally manipulative pitches, false urgency, an
kttn.com
· 2025-12-08
Four California men have been indicted for operating a nationwide tech support fraud scheme targeting elderly victims, with Yu-Chieh Huang arrested as a courier after attempting to pick up $88,000 from a Missouri couple who were told their computer contained evidence of a crime. The scam, which operated from 2020 to 2023, involved Liang Jin and Kaiyu Wen directing couriers and recruiting individuals to fraudulently open bank accounts, resulting in approximately $7 million in fraudulent transactions before authorities intervened. One suspect, Kaiyu Wen, remains at large.
scdemocratonline.com
· 2025-12-08
Jeff Bank leaders discussed the rising prevalence of fraud and scams targeting their customers, particularly elderly individuals who are being defrauded of substantial sums of money. The bank has increased staff training on scam detection and conducted community outreach to vulnerable populations, while noting that scams often go undetected until money has already been sent. Common scams include the Microsoft pop-up scam, lottery fee schemes, the "grandma scam" involving emergency situations, and unsolicited requests for money through electronic channels or phone calls.
vancouver.citynews.ca
· 2025-12-08
Port Moody police reported three "grandparent" scams in a single day in February 2024, resulting in $12,000 in losses, where callers impersonated grandchildren claiming to need money for car repairs or legal fees. Victims were instructed to withdraw cash from banks and meet the suspects in person to exchange money, with police noting an additional incident the previous week where an elderly couple lost $21,000 under similar circumstances. Law enforcement warned that these scams are becoming increasingly sophisticated, with scammers using artificial intelligence to alter voices and impersonate family members more convincingly.
cbs2iowa.com
· 2025-12-08
Steve Deines of Marion, Iowa lost thousands of dollars to overseas scammers who used phone harassment and pressure tactics to convince him to send money via gift cards and grant remote computer access. Local police emphasize that recovered funds are virtually impossible once transferred overseas, and they stress public education as the best prevention, advising people to avoid paying anyone with gift cards, ignore scare tactics and urgency demands, and verify requests through trusted contacts before taking action.
goldrushcam.com
· 2025-12-08
Four California men were indicted in a nationwide tech support scam targeting elderly victims, with one serving as a courier collecting cash from victims under false pretenses of criminal prosecution. The scheme defrauded victims of millions of dollars between 2020-2023, including an $88,000 loss from a Missouri couple who became suspicious and alerted police; Yu-Chieh Huang (the courier) has been arrested, Liang Jin and Tsz Yin Kan have been apprehended, and Kaiyu Wen remains at large.
cnbc.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2023, consumers lost a record $10 billion to fraud, with imposter scams being the most prevalent, affecting nearly 854,000 people and resulting in $2.7 billion in losses at an average of $800 per victim. Imposter scams involve criminals posing as trusted entities (government agencies, companies, relatives, or romantic interests) via email, phone, text, or social media to steal money or personal information, with emerging technologies like AI and voice cloning making these frauds increasingly convincing. Older adults, particularly those 80 and over, experience significantly higher median losses ($1,450) and are particularly vulnerable to "phantom hacker" tech-
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
Four California men have been indicted for operating a nationwide tech support fraud scam targeting elderly victims, with one indictment originating from a case involving a 78-year-old Missouri man and his 76-year-old wife who were defrauded of $88,000. The scheme involved scammers posing as tech support workers who convinced victims their computers were infected or compromised, then used recruited couriers to collect cash payments; approximately $7 million in fraudulent transactions occurred between March 2020 and July 2023. Two defendants have been arrested, one remains in custody, and one is still being sought.
bocaratontribune.com
· 2025-12-08
# Medicare Fraud Summary
Scammers are bombarding seniors with 50-60 fraudulent phone calls daily during Medicare's open enrollment period, using spoofed numbers and impersonation to steal personal information, commit identity theft, and bill the government for fake medical equipment. Complaints about these scams have surged 40 percent this year, leaving victims like an 80-year-old Pennsylvania man receiving calls every 14 minutes and experiencing severe harassment. To protect yourself, never verify Medicare information over the phone, hang up on unsolicited callers claiming to be from healthcare providers, and report suspicious calls to the Federal Communications Commission or Better Business Bureau.
dig.watch
· 2025-12-08
Taiwan has blocked the Chinese app RedNote for one year after over 1,700 fraud cases and NT$247 million in losses were linked to the platform, with authorities citing the company's failure to meet data security standards. Millions of Taiwanese users will now see security warnings when trying to access the app as internet providers enforce the restrictions. Users should avoid financial transactions on unregulated foreign apps and be cautious of unsolicited offers or requests for personal information on social platforms.
cnn.com
· 2025-12-07
Crypto ATM machines at convenience stores across the U.S. have become primary tools for scammers targeting Americans, particularly seniors, who are tricked into depositing cash to resolve fabricated legal or financial emergencies. In one Arizona location alone, at least a dozen victims lost $118,000 in a year, including four people defrauded of a combined $54,000 in just four days. The crypto ATM companies profit significantly from these frauds through 20-30% markups on cryptocurrency transactions while largely failing to implement fraud-prevention measures, refusing victim refunds, and lobbying against protective legislation—with the FBI reporting Americans lost approximately $240 million to such scams in
stories.td.com
· 2025-12-07
Shruti Kaushik, a Senior Manager on TD Bank's cybercrime team, leads efforts to detect and shut down phishing, smishing, and vishing scams that fraudsters use to steal sensitive information from customers. The article highlights how cybercrimes are becoming increasingly automated and sophisticated, with particular concerns around fake text messages and spoofed calls, and emphasizes that customers should avoid acting on urgent requests and ignore suspicious communications rather than engaging with them.
switzer.com.au
· 2025-12-07
In 2024, Australians lost over A$2.03 billion to scams across 494,732 reported cases, with most enabled by technology through online or phone contact. Scammers exploit universal psychological principles—including need, greed, authority, distraction, and social proof—that are similar to legitimate persuasion techniques used in advertising and marketing, making everyone vulnerable regardless of expertise or background. Understanding these manipulation tactics can help people recognize and resist scams by questioning whether they're being rushed, whether claims seem too good to be true, and whether the request matches legitimate practices.
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-07
The FBI is warning about a surge in AI-enabled scams that have drained over $1 billion from seniors' retirement accounts, with fraudsters using artificial intelligence to impersonate loved ones or financial institutions via phone calls and emails. While seniors are primary targets due to having more cash available, experts note that 73% of Americans may face fraud attempts, and recommend protection strategies including regular password changes, avoiding sharing personal information over the phone, verifying requests through third parties, and being wary of pressure to act quickly or deals that seem too good to be true.
foxnews.com
· 2025-12-07
**Scam Type:** Fake settlement claim websites and phishing emails
Scammers are creating fraudulent websites and sending deceptive emails impersonating legitimate data breach settlement payouts (such as Facebook's $725 million and AT&T's $177 million settlements) to steal victims' Social Security numbers, banking information, and other personal data. To protect yourself, verify settlements through the FTC's official ftc.gov/enforcement/refunds site, watch for red flags like requests for complete SSNs, processing fees, urgent language, misspelled URLs, and grammar errors, and consider mailing claims directly rather than using links in emails.
theguardian.com
· 2025-12-07
A Chinese court recently sentenced 11 people to death for operating an illegal scam network along the Myanmar border, but experts warn this represents only a fraction of a multibillion-dollar "pig-butchering" fraud industry spanning Southeast Asia and beyond. The schemes victimize two groups: those defrauded by romance or business scammers, and trafficked workers forced to perpetrate crimes in prison-like compounds under threat, torture, and modern slavery conditions. An estimated 220,000 people have been trafficked into online scam centers in Myanmar and Cambodia alone, with operations now identified in Serbia, Peru, Pakistan, and Africa, exploiting deepfake technology and evading enforcement through corrupt
azcentral.com
· 2025-12-07
Phishing scams use fake urgent documents—purporting to be contracts, invoices, or banking forms—to create anxiety and prompt victims to click malicious links without thinking. Red flags include mismatched sender domains, suspicious links, generic wording, and pressure tactics like threats of account suspension. To protect yourself, avoid clicking links or attachments, verify sender authenticity by checking email headers (SPF, DKIM, DMARC results) or contacting the organization directly through official channels, and remember that legitimate documents should be expected before arriving.
longislandpress.com
· 2025-12-07
Two men were arrested in connection with an elder fraud scheme in East Rockaway on October 6, 2025, in which a 74-year-old woman was deceived by a fake computer warning message and withdrew $117,000 that she handed over to accomplices. Jinqin Jiang, 46, and Chengxiang Jiang, 40, were charged with grand larceny and related offenses; the latter was also linked to a prior August scam targeting a 78-year-old man for approximately $78,000. Both men were found to be in the country illegally and were transferred to ICE custody for removal proceedings.
themanchestermirror.com
· 2025-12-07
The Washtenaw County Sheriff's Office warns of increased phone and email scams in the region where callers impersonate law enforcement and claim victims have warrants or that their relatives are in jail, demanding immediate payment via wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency. The sheriff's office emphasizes that legitimate law enforcement never demands payment over the phone and advises recipients to hang up, avoid providing personal information, resist pressure for immediate action, and verify claims by calling Metro Dispatch directly at 734-994-2911.
cantonrep.com
· 2025-12-07
Holiday decoration scams involve fraudulent online retailers advertising discounted decorations through social media and websites that deliver substandard miniature products or fail to deliver altogether, leaving consumers unable to contact the company or receive refunds. Reported losses range from $53 to $257 per victim. To avoid these scams, consumers should research unfamiliar vendors before purchasing, be skeptical of prices that seem too good to be true, avoid impulse buying on social media ads, and always use credit cards for online purchases to enable charge disputes.
earth.com
· 2025-12-07
Gabriel Aguilar, a University of Texas at Arlington professor, was nearly victimized by a fake job offer scam involving a fraudulent check years ago; this experience inspired his current research on how artificial intelligence tools like chatbots, deepfakes, and voice clones are making scams more convincing, particularly targeting Latino communities who face obstacles including limited digital access and financial stress. Aguilar's published study and teaching methods focus on educating students to recognize AI-powered manipulation tactics—including fake job listings, impersonated government websites, and voice cloning—by teaching them to identify tone, rhythm, and context in deceptive messages. He emphasizes that AI did not revolutionize
atholdailynews.com
· 2025-12-07
Between 2023 and May 2025, the FBI's Boston Division documented 103 courier-based fraud schemes targeting elderly residents, resulting in over $26 million in losses, with 59 Massachusetts victims losing $18.6 million combined—98% of losses reported by people over 60. The scams typically involved impersonation (grandparent, government, or tech support) to convince victims to either transfer funds to fake government accounts or hand cash and gold bars to couriers; nationally, the FBI documented 1,737 similar instances totaling approximately $186.2 million in losses. The FBI advises the public to discuss these schemes with elderly relatives and warns that the government
technology.org
· 2025-12-07
University of Missouri researchers studying online dating scams found that perpetrators have evolved their tactics, moving away from obvious "too-good-to-be-true" profiles toward "strategic imperfection"—including fake flaws like divorce or ordinary jobs—to appear more credible. The study of thousands of victim reports revealed scammers commonly pose as educated professionals (doctors, engineers, military personnel) around age 50 and use emotional crisis scenarios (health emergencies, work problems, financial hardship) to manipulate victims, with work-related crises proving most effective and even skeptical people susceptible when emotionally engaged. Researchers propose that AI-powered tools trained on linguistic patterns and narrative analysis could provide
cnhi.com
· 2025-12-07
Older adults aged 60-plus lost $3.4 billion globally to financial scammers in 2023, with fraudsters targeting this population because they believe older adults have substantial savings and are less likely to report crimes. The article describes five common scams targeting seniors: grandparent scams (emotional manipulation using impersonation), financial services scams (impersonating banks or debt collectors), tech support scams (the most frequently reported type), government impersonation scams (IRS/Social Security threats), and romance scams, all of which exploit trust, fear, or emotion to extract money or personal information.
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-07
On October 16, 2025, AARP Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Elder Justice Coalition hosted a Scam Jam educational event at UW-Green Bay to inform attendees about current fraud schemes and connect them with anti-fraud professionals. The event featured a resource fair with multiple Wisconsin organizations dedicated to combating elder fraud, including AARP's Fraud Watch Network, the Better Business Bureau, state consumer protection agencies, and victim support services, all providing free educational materials, complaint filing assistance, and community presentations.
townhall.com
· 2025-12-07
Tochuwku Albert Nnebocha, 43, a Nigerian national extradited from Poland, faces federal charges for operating a transnational romance/inheritance scam that defrauded American seniors over five years by falsely claiming they had won multimillion-dollar inheritances from Spain and requesting upfront fees. Victims were instructed to send money through a network of U.S.-based former victims who forwarded funds to the defendants, with none of the promised inheritances ever materialized. Nnebocha faces up to 20 years in prison; two co-conspirators have already been sentenced to 97 months each for their roles in the scheme.
townhall.com
· 2025-12-07
Tochuwku Albert Nnebocha, a 43-year-old Nigerian national extradited from Poland, faces federal charges for operating a transnational inheritance scam that defrauded American seniors over five years. The scheme involved sending personalized letters claiming victims were entitled to multimillion-dollar inheritances from deceased Spanish relatives, then requesting upfront fees for delivery and taxes; victims sent money through a network of U.S.-based accomplices but never received the promised funds. Nnebocha faces up to 20 years in prison, and two co-defendants have already been sentenced to approximately 8 years each.
timesofindia.indiatimes.com
· 2025-12-07
An 80-year-old resident of Kolkata lost Rs 33 lakh over two weeks in a digital arrest fraud scheme where three individuals impersonated CBI officers and convinced him he was "digitally arrested," causing him to transfer funds via RTGS out of fear of legal consequences. Police recovered Rs 8 lakh and are continuing investigations under multiple BNS sections, with authorities emphasizing that elderly people are particularly vulnerable to such scams due to limited digital literacy, trust in authority figures, and social isolation.
aol.com
· 2025-12-07
Internet scams have evolved from crude 1990s email cons like Nigerian prince schemes to sophisticated AI-powered deepfakes that can convincingly impersonate voices and faces, with phishing attacks emerging in the early 2000s as online banking adoption grew. Despite technological advances making fraud more convincing and difficult to detect, successful scams continue to rely on exploiting fundamental human emotions—greed, fear, compassion, and loneliness—through predictable psychological manipulation patterns that create urgency and isolate victims from support systems. Understanding how scam tactics have evolved reveals that technological complexity often masks simple psychological manipulation, and recognizing consistent underlying patterns can help potential victims identify manipulation attempts regardless of delivery method.
kdhlradio.com
· 2025-12-07
Scammers posing as Wells Fargo contacted Minnesota residents and convinced three people in the Duluth area to overnight ship cash to Florida, resulting in $48,000 in combined losses before authorities recovered the funds. Police warn that legitimate financial institutions never request customers send money, gift cards, or wire funds, and advise victims to hang up and call their bank directly using a verified number rather than returning the scammer's call. Criminals are also increasingly using AI technology to mimic loved ones' voices in phone scams targeting seniors, making it critical for families to discuss these threats and verify unusual requests in person at bank branches.
bioengineer.org
· 2025-12-07
Fraudsters are increasingly employing artificial intelligence to create more convincing scams targeting vulnerable populations, particularly the Latino community and those with limited technology knowledge. Assistant Professor Gabriel Aguilar, who himself fell victim to a fake job offer scam involving a fraudulent check as a college student, advocates for enhanced AI literacy education to help students and communities recognize and combat AI-enabled deceptions such as deepfakes and voice-cloning technology. Aguilar proposes that educators integrate critical thinking about AI scams into technical writing and communication curricula to equip learners with tools to identify fraud and protect themselves and their communities.
uk.pcmag.com
· 2025-12-07
A cybersecurity journalist received a suspicious PR pitch email that exhibited multiple scam indicators: the sender used a generic Gmail address instead of corporate domain, maintained only inactive or spammy social media accounts, provided no website links, and represented a company with a "Poor" TrustPilot rating and complaints from customers who paid for subscriptions but received nothing in return. The article serves as an educational guide identifying common red flags in scam emails, including hijacked "zombie" accounts, vague privacy policies, and generic website design, to help readers recognize and avoid similar fraudulent pitches.
usu.edu
· 2025-12-07
Phishing is a widespread cybercrime tactic where scammers impersonate trusted sources via email, phone, text, or social media to trick individuals into revealing sensitive information like passwords, bank account numbers, and Social Security numbers. Key warning signs include suspicious sender addresses, generic language, urgent/threatening tone, and unexpected links or attachments; individuals can protect themselves by never sharing passwords, carefully examining sender addresses, hovering over links before clicking, and reporting suspicious messages to their IT department immediately.
abc7news.com
· 2025-12-07
Scammers operating from overseas, many in Southeast Asian compounds, are exploiting Bitcoin ATM machines to steal from victims through classic fraud schemes—including impersonation scams, computer hacking claims, and fake legal emergencies—directing them to convert cash into cryptocurrency. Victims like San Jose resident Jim Meduri and an 82-year-old Minnesota woman lost thousands of dollars this way, though some funds have been recovered through blockchain tracking and law enforcement intervention. The DC attorney general has sued Bitcoin ATM provider Athena Bitcoin over inadequate fraud protections, as cryptocurrency theft through these machines has become a major scam tool with victims often unaware their money goes directly to criminals.
liherald.com
· 2025-12-07
A 74-year-old woman in East Rockaway lost $117,000 in an elder scam after receiving a fake computer security warning that instructed her to withdraw funds to "protect" her money; she handed the cash to unknown men between October 1-3 before realizing the fraud on October 6. Police arrested Brooklyn resident Jinqin Jiang, 46, and charged him with attempted grand larceny in the third degree and resisting arrest, though he was subsequently taken into custody by ICE for illegal immigration status.
local.aarp.org
· 2025-12-07
**Scam Jam Educational Event - October 16, 2025**
AARP Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Elder Justice Coalition hosted a Scam Jam awareness event at UW-Green Bay to educate attendees about current scams and connect them with fraud-fighting professionals. The event featured a resource fair with multiple Wisconsin organizations including AARP's Fraud Watch Network, the Better Business Bureau, state consumer protection agencies, and local support services, all offering free fraud prevention information, complaint filing assistance, and community presentations.
longisland.com
· 2025-12-07
A 74-year-old woman in East Rockaway withdrew $117,000 between October 1-3, 2025, after receiving a computer warning message and being instructed by phone scammers to withdraw funds to protect her money; she realized the fraud on October 6 and reported it to police. Two suspects were arrested in connection with this scam and a second elder fraud targeting a 78-year-old male in Rockville Centre in August 2025: Jinqin Jiang, 46, charged with Attempted Grand Larceny 3rd Degree and Resisting Arrest, and Chengxiang Jiang, 40
express.co.uk
· 2025-12-07
According to Citizens Advice, one in five UK residents fell victim to financial scams, prompting cybersecurity companies to develop protective tools. McAfee launched a Scam Detector feature within its Total Protection and LiveSafe packages that identifies suspicious text, email, and video messages across multiple platforms and devices, starting at £10.99 per year. The tool works alongside antivirus protection to help users avoid malware infections and financial fraud schemes.