Whatever you do, don’t call this number back.
QUEENSLANDERS have been warned of a sophisticated Central
African phone scam which could cost them dearly.
Queensland
Police Senior Sergeant Steve Smith said people had started receiving calls two
nights ago from a number based in Cameroon.
The Sunshine Coast Daily reports
that the ‘call-back scam’ involved an extremely short call at times of great
inconvenience, giving little or no opportunity to answer the phone.
When
the receiver of the missed call dials back, they start to be stung with
international premium call rates as the scammers have set up a toll number.
Often
originating in the countries with the highest toll rates, the fees are split
between the scammers and the telephone company.
The
scam has drained prepaid credit users, while postpaid mobile phone owners have
seen their next phone bills skyrocket after being stung by one of the scammers.
The
call-back scam circulated New Zealand in April this year, and was dubbed the
‘Wangiri scam’, meaning ‘one ring and cut’.
Snr Sgt Smith said the
person on the other end of the line often employed various tactics to keep the
target on the line as long as possible.
He said they were
often told they’d won large sums of money, that family members had died or been
seriously injured, even exposed to sexual conversations, to try and keep the
victim on the line as long as possible, in doing so maximising the cost of the
call.
Police do not believe
the scam has compromised personal details or phone numbers, but is being driven
by an automated process generating phone numbers.
“It is expected that
very large numbers of these scam calls could be made as a result,” Snr Sgt
Smith said.
He warned people not
to call back the number if identified as from Cameroon, and similarly, don’t
call back other international numbers if they don’t recognise the number.
He said another SMS
scam was currently in operation, with text messages being sent offering chances
to win Woolworths gift cards, often referring to the recipient by their name of
nickname.
The recipient can then
be tricked into downloading a Trojan horse, virus or malware through their
phone or mobile device, if they open the link.
Snr Sgt Smith advised
not to reply to messages from unknown callers and never to respond to anything
immediately.
“Never click on links
in emails or messages sent to you by unknown sources,” he said.
Scams can be reported
through the Australian Cybercrime Online Reporting Network (A.C. O. R. N) and
up-to-date scam advice is available via Scamwatch.
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