UAE | Crime

Mum-to-be faces fraud case after being conned by hackers

Mum-to-be faces fraud case after becoming latest addition to list of ‘money mule' victims

  • By Jay B. Hilotin, Chief reporter, XPRESS
  • Published: 00:00 October 27, 2011
  • XPRESS

  • Image Credit: © XPRESS/Jay B. Hilotin
  • Tanya, 29, who said she was duped into being a money mule, reads last week’s XPRESS story about another victim

DUBAI: A pregnant European woman is facing a Dh75,000 fraud case after unwittingly falling prey to a hacking syndicate, XPRESS has learnt.

Tanya, 29, a Dubai-based mum-to-be in her 21st week of pregnancy, said she unknowingly played into the hands of white-collar conmen preying on unsuspecting "money mules".

"I was applying for a job which I thought would give me a source of extra income during my maternity leave," said Tanya, an administrative officer for a leading apparel maker. "I'm just afraid this situation might harm my baby."

Latest victim

She is the latest in a mounting list of ‘money-mule' victims used by hackers who steal money from UAE bank customers and launder them through the use of international remittance networks. In two such attacks reported by XPRESS, the hackers used the job-offer ruse as their bait.

Tanya's was no different.

Her ordeal started in late July when she applied for a home-based job to augment her income and uploaded her CV onto an online jobs site. On Monday, August 1, she saw numerous missed calls on her phone from a UK number.

When she returned the call, the person on the other end of the line introduced himself as Bill Brown, and promised her a $2,000 (Dh7,346)-a-month job as a coordinator for a charity called AMD.

"They sent me a job contract for this part-time job. The AMD charity website showed no indication it's involved in a scam," said Tanya.

She was told that her job was to collect and send money from UAE donors.

On August 1, she was informed that ‘donors' had moved Dh75,000 to her account. On August 2, Tanya said that as instructed, she withdrew the money over the counter from the bank's branch on Shaikh Zayed Road.

She sent Dh74,500 to four different people in Russia and used the rest on remittance charges. On August 15, she received a call from the police who called her in for questioning.

When she visited Abu Dhabi Police on August 16, it dawned on her that she had been used as a money mule. "I gave e-mail copies and remittance receipts of the money sent to four different people in Russia. All the recipients have Russian names," said Tanya.

On August 23, police took her passport.

Tanya said that to get the matter off her back, she had applied for a bank loan to compensate the victim, an Abu Dhabi-based Briton whose account was hacked. "I'm also a victim here as much as the person whose account was hacked," she said.

She blames the bank for not taking prompt action.

"The stolen money was credited to my account at around 10pm on August 1. The victim reported the fraud to the bank from as early as 9am on August 2. I sent the money at 5pm on August 2. If the bank had called or warned me that the money was taken fraudulently, I would never have touched it."

Comments (3)

Comment
  1. Added 12:05 October 27, 2011

    Where does the bank stand while the amount was taken from the account & transfered to the victim's (Tanya) account? Definitely, there are loopholes in the system and the bank should be fully held responsible for such a fraudulent transaction. While there is sufficient proof that the transaction was not committed deliberately, the victim (Tanya) should not be penalised to pay this amount. She is equally a victim as much as the targeted poor Briton who fell prey to the fraud.

    Anonymous, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

  2. Added 11:27 October 27, 2011

    I had once recieved an e-mail to work for a charity organisation on the same lines as yours. When I contacted the person and sent my CV, I got a reply saying my account number would be of prime interest due to all transactions and offered me a good amount to just sit home and work. The web link provided seemed very genuine. But what triggered my doubts that it could possibly be a scam was the details required for my account. That was when I jus backed out. Feel sorry for people who are targeted by such scams.

    Anonymous, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

  3. Added 09:26 October 27, 2011

    The same thing nearly happened to my wife on applying for a job. But when the persons asked for my wife's bank account details, we smelled a rat. We've never heard from them since. The 'job' was advertised in Dubizzle or Gulf News, can't remember which. A similar thing happened with a fake etisalat "promotion". We kept the number which seemed to be too close to our own number, and phoned etisalat who confirmed they had no such "promotion". We passed on the "number" to etisalat but have heard nothing since. On a similar theme, I wonder how many people in the UAE fell for the UK "Greenbelt Land" scam that was openly advertised in Malls in Dubai and Abu Dhabi during 2008/2009? Furthermore, does anyone in the UAE understand the "Writ of Habeous Corpus."? A man is innocent until proven guilty! Obviously not!

    Anonymous, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

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