For Immediate Release CONTACT: Holly Anderson
1/27/99
  (202) 835-3323

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Money for Nothing: Top 10 Scams Released

NCL, U.S. and Canadian Law Enforcement Officials Warn about
Loan and Credit Frauds

WASHINGTON, DC... Cramming, billing consumers for optional services that they never ordered, was the number one scam reported to the National Fraud Information Center last year. The second most reported telemarketing fraud was advance fee loans, a credit fraud where consumers pay up front fees hoping to receive personal or business loans.

1998 NFIC Top Ten Telemarketing Frauds
1. Telephone cramming
2. Advance fee loans
3. Telephone slamming
4. Prizes/sweepstakes
5. Work-at-home schemes
6. Magazine sales
7. Credit card offers
8. Telephone pay-per-call services
9. Business opportunities/franchises
10.Travel/vacation offers

 

The amount of money that consumers are losing to fraudulent telemarketers in credit-related schemes is on the rise. That's why the National Fraud Information Center and other fraud fighters are issuing a special warning today about credit frauds, which are the focus of National Consumer Protection Week, February 1-8.

"These companies either call consumers directly or advertise for them to call to get loans, credit cards, credit card protection or credit repair services," explains Susan Grant, director of NCL's National Fraud Information Center. "But these telemarketers never deliver on their promises. Their real aim is simply to take money from consumers, not to give them money or credit assistance."

Two other credit-related subjects, credit card loss protection plans and credit repair, rank 16 and 24 out of a total of 50 telemarketing fraud categories.

In each of the four credit-related telemarketing fraud categories, advance fee loans, credit card offers, credit card loss protection and credit repair, the average loss per consumer went up from 1997 to 1998, in some cases significantly:

 Telemarketing fraud category

  1997

  1998

 Advance fee loans

 $557

  $920

 Credit card offers

 $129

$181

 Credit card loss protection

 $178

 $473

 Credit repair

  $568

  $725

 

"The hallmarks of all these frauds is that people pay their money up-front and get nothing in return," observes Ms. Grant. "And the crooks seem to be getting more greedy."

"Telemarketing fraud reaches across state, national, and international lines," Ohio Attorney General Betty D. Montgomery said. "Illegal telemarketers use the phone as an assault weapon, and in the wrong hands, it can be just as effective as a gun to your head. The good news is that law enforcement authorities are working together to stop illegal telemarketers no matter where they are."

Canadian law enforcement is also aggressively fighting fraud. According to George Bennett of Industry Canada, "Canadian consumers and businesses will be better protected from telemarketing frauds by new measures contained in proposed amendments to the Competition Act, which will also help address the concerns of The United States about the growing problem of cross-border telemarketing frauds."

In the case of advance fee loans, 80 percent of the fraudulent telemarketers that consumers reported to the NFIC in 1998 were located in Canada. Regardless of where the companies are located, if the victims are in the U.S., U.S. law prohibits telemarketers from asking for fees up-front to loan money. Barry Elliott, Detective Staff Sergeant with the Ontario Provincial Police, and of Project Phonebusters, warns, "If you can't get a loan where you live you can't get a loan anywhere."

How a consumer pays is a particularly interesting aspect of credit-related telemarketing fraud because it varies according to the scam. For instance, the NFIC's 1998 statistics reveal that most payments for advance fee loans were by money order or check. But nearly 85 percent of the payments that consumers made for credit card loss protection plans were by credit card. The telemarketers often misrepresent themselves as being affiliated with the consumers' credit card issuers and pretend that they need to "verify" the account numbers in order for the consumers to qualify for protection against lost or stolen cards. Some consumers do not realize that a fee will be charged to their accounts. And since consumers already have protection by law from liability for lost or stolen cards, credit loss protection plans are not really necessary

More than 40 percent of the payments in bogus credit card offers were through debits from consumers' bank accounts in 1998, according to the NFIC. "Because these consumers may not already have credit cards and often have credit problems, the easiest way for crooks to get money from them is to ask for their bank account numbers and then withdraw it," says Ms. Grant. Bank account withdrawals also accounted for more than 26 percent of the payments that consumers reported making in 1998 for credit repair services.

NCL cautions consumers never to pay in advance for loans, credit cards, or credit-related services that are offered by telemarketers. Furthermore, people should not provide their credit card or bank account numbers to any vendor unless they actually intend to pay for something with those accounts.

Click here for a top ten fact sheet.

Click here for charts.

 

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The National Consumers League, founded in 1899, is America's pioneer consumer organization. The NCL's three-pronged approach of research, education and advocacy has made it an effective representative and source of information for consumers and workers. NCL is a private, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to representing consumers on issues of concern.

Phonebusters, is a National Task Force established in 1993, which has become the central source of telemarketing complaints throughout Canada. The project partners include the Ontario Provincial Police, R.C.M.P., Industry Canada, several Provincial Ministries, Bankers Association, the Canadian Couriers Association and the Better Business Bureaus.

For more information, write the National Consumers League at 1701 K Street, N. W., Suite 1200, Washington, DC 20006; 202-835-3323.

The National Consumers League, founded in 1899, is America's pioneer consumer organization. NCL's three-pronged approach of research, education and advocacy has made it an effective representative and source of information for consumers and workers. NCL is a private, nonprofit organization representing the consumer on marketplace and workplace issues.

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