Filter news by category
Kym Marsh is trading Coronation Street's cobbles for a world of crime with a new BBC show tackling "romance fraud". She will co-present the daytime TV series, For Love Or Money, with reporter Ashley John-Baptiste. It will air this autumn.
https://www.heraldscotland.com/arts_ents/17812180.kym-marsh-swaps-coronation-street-world-crime/?ref=twtrec
AN AMATEUR actress who stole £740,000 from taxpayers by conning the authorities into believing her dead father was alive has been jailed for nearly six years.
A man has been jailed after encouraging people to pretend to be ill on holiday to claim compensation.
Automatic push payment fraud is a growing problem where fraudsters deceive an individual or business to instruct their payment services provider, such as their bank, to send money to an account controlled by the fraudster. An increasingly common example is when a fraudster intercepts or replicates a genuine business email and instead inserts their own bank details.
https://www.trethowans.com/news/cybercrime-do-your-terms-and-conditions-protect-you/
Britain’s biggest ever benefits fraudster who faked dementia and hid her father’s death to pocket £750,000 has been jailed.
According to the data obtained by RSM from the UK’s national fraud and cyber-crime reporting centre, businesses lost a total of £99,283,213 to mandate fraud in 2018/19.
Former agent Willie McKay is to stand trial charged with fraud.
The study, conducted by cybersecurity company Cheq and the University of Baltimore, claims that influencer fraud will cost advertisers $1.3 billion this year, a number projected to grow to $1.5 billion in 2020.
http://www.netimperative.com/2019/08/influencer-fraud-costing-brands-over-1-billion/#.XULJiEVCMNU.twitter
Coronation Street star Kym Marsh is turning her skills to presenting a new investigative BBC TV show about the perils of online dating fraudsters
Businesses are being warned about the dangers of mandate fraud after new figures show that reported losses reached almost £100m in 2018/19.
Search articles by keyword
Midlands Fraud Forum Ltd. Reg.No: 06436330 Copyright © 2023 Disclaimer & Privacy Policy