Scammers have stolen £11.4 billion from UK citizens over the last 12 months. According to the Global Anti-Scam Alliance’s (GASA) latest report, The State of Scams in the UK, conducted in association with the UK’s leading fraud prevention service, Cifas, this represents an increase of £4 billion over the previous year. With the Black Friday sales bonanza looming on both sides of the Atlantic, the findings come as a timely warning to online shoppers. GASA and Cifas anticipate a further spike in scam attempts this week and re-urging consumers to remain vigilant. The warning comes as 1 in 7 (15 percent) consumers surveyed said they lost cash to criminals in 2024, an increase from 10 percent in 2023. The average loss per victim was £1,400, and only 18 percent of victims recovered all their money.
Online investment fraudsters are becoming more devious and organized, making their increasingly sophisticated scams tough to detect for ordinary investors. A bust carried out by Europol and local European law enforcement on the perpetrators of the €645 million JuicyFields marijuana investment scam on April 11 is a prime example. Europol estimates that 550,000 investors worldwide, most from Europe, were drawn into the scam. Using bank transfers or cryptocurrencies, around 186,000 participants transferred funds to JuicyFields from early 2020 to July 2022. The JuicyFields fraudsters used advertisements on social networks to lure victims to their websites. These offered crowdsourcing investment opportunities in the cultivation, harvesting, and distribution of marijuana plants to be used for medicinal purposes. For a minimum initial investment of €50 in a so-called ‘e-growing’ opportunity, investors were promised to be linked with producers of medical cannabis.
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