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'No red flags': Heartbroken realty agent loses $100k in elaborate finance scam

Author
Lane Nichols,
Publish Date
Sun, 14 May 2023, 2:13pm
Carla O'Neil lost $100,000 in an elaborate investment scam in which she thought she was putting the money into a Citibank term deposit. Photo / Michael Craig
Carla O'Neil lost $100,000 in an elaborate investment scam in which she thought she was putting the money into a Citibank term deposit. Photo / Michael Craig

'No red flags': Heartbroken realty agent loses $100k in elaborate finance scam

Author
Lane Nichols,
Publish Date
Sun, 14 May 2023, 2:13pm

A real estate agent tricked into wiring $100,000 as part of a sophisticated investment scam says police told her the recipient bank account holder was likely a 鈥渕ule鈥 targeted by the same overseas criminals to help shift the cash.

Carla O鈥橬eil thought she had done proper due diligence and was convinced her life savings were secure, telling the聽贬别谤补濒诲听鈥渢here were no red flags鈥.

The professional 45-year-old was scoping investment opportunities this year to grow her money while she saved for a house. She found a website comparing bank term deposit rates and registered her details.

She was contacted by an 鈥渋ntelligent and well-spoken鈥 man with an English accent claiming to be a Citibank portfolio manager. He sent her prospectus information about the US financial institution鈥檚 fixed-rate bonds and term deposit options.

He appeared to use a Citibank email address and provided an Auckland phone number. The pair talked repeatedly while O鈥橬eil researched the 12-month fixed-term investment at 7.1 per cent interest, described as 鈥渓ow-risk鈥.

O鈥橬eil, who says she鈥檚 tech-savvy, 鈥渟talked鈥 the man online to confirm he was real and based at the company鈥檚 downtown Auckland office.

Satisfied the investment was legitimate, O鈥橬eil handed over her passport, address and bank account details.

She then visited her local BNZ branch and instructed staff to transfer $100,000 on February 17 to an ASB bank account specified on a Citibank-branded payment invoice.

Next, she was emailed log-in details to an elaborate online 鈥渃lient portal鈥 where she could see her money had been received into the term deposit account and track her investment as it accrued interest.

But none of it was real.

A fake Citibank investor portal used in an elaborate scam to defraud a North Shore real estate agent out of $100,000. Photo / Supplied

A fake Citibank investor portal used in an elaborate scam to defraud a North Shore real estate agent out of $100,000. Photo / Supplied

The man with the English accent had been impersonating a genuine Citibank employee, and her money was gone in a scam that鈥檚 been聽聽here and in Australia since last year.

A month after wiring the cash, O鈥橬eil received a bombshell phone call from BNZ.

鈥淗e said, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e been involved in a scam鈥. I said, 鈥楴o that鈥檚 not possible鈥.鈥

She hung up and visited her BNZ branch where staff confirmed she鈥檇 been taken in.

鈥淚 just burst into tears. It鈥檚 my life savings. It鈥檚 just heartbreaking.鈥

With the scammer鈥檚 number now disconnected, O鈥橬eil contacted police who obtained a court order to force ASB to hand over the recipient account holder鈥檚 details.

But police told her the recipient was likely a 鈥渕ule鈥 caught up in the trickery, either moving money on as part of a romance scam, or their internet banking had been hacked by the thieves.

A fake Citibank investor portal used in an elaborate scam to defraud a North Shore real estate agent out of $100,000. Photo / Supplied

A fake Citibank investor portal used in an elaborate scam to defraud a North Shore real estate agent out of $100,000. Photo / Supplied

The banks meanwhile tried to freeze the stolen money to prevent its likely transfer offshore.

Emails obtained by the聽贬别谤补濒诲听show O鈥橬eil sought repeated updates from BNZ about efforts to track the funds, telling the fraud protection unit: 鈥淭his is my entire nest egg ... I am beyond devastated that this has happened鈥.

Another email last month said: 鈥淚 find it impossible to believe that funds of this magnitude can just go missing and not [be] tracked and retrieved immediately鈥.

BNZ responded that the money appeared to have been transferred out of the recipient account and ASB was attempting to recall the money.

鈥淭here is nothing more the BNZ can do as we wait [for] an update from the ASB.鈥

Then last week, a mystery payment of $19,703.63 appeared in her savings account with the notification 鈥淎SB fraud鈥.

Carla O'Neil, 45, believed she had done proper due diligence and that the investment opportunity was legitimate. Photo / Michael Craig

Carla O'Neil, 45, believed she had done proper due diligence and that the investment opportunity was legitimate. Photo / Michael Craig

O鈥橬eil said she鈥檇 not received an explanation from either bank about the payment or clarification about the status of the rest of her stolen money.

She claims no one at BNZ questioned the initial $100,000 transfer or confirmed with her the legitimacy of the recipient.

In her opinion, the Citibank-branded payment invoice listing an ASB account should have triggered the bank鈥檚 suspicion.

O鈥橬eil was now worried the scammers had her address. She asked police if she needed to move for her safety, but they told her the con man was probably based overseas.

She was speaking out to warn other Kiwis about the highly sophisticated scam.

鈥淚f I can get sucked into it I鈥檓 sure there are other people.鈥

鈥楶rey on people鈥檚 trust鈥

A BNZ spokeswoman said O鈥橬eil unknowingly engaged with a scammer during an online search for financial services.

The bank had worked hard to recover the stolen money and assist police investigations.

Documents provided to the bank by O鈥橬eil showed no evidence the $100,000 transaction was a scam, BNZ said.

It was not unusual for legitimate financial service providers to have accounts at New Zealand鈥檚 main banks. The $100,000 transfer was made to a valid bank account and term deposit transfers like this were common across the banking sector.

After being alerted to the fraud by ASB, BNZ immediately informed O鈥橬eil and began urgent work to recover the money - $20,000 of which was successfully frozen and returned.

An investigation into the remaining funds continued.

鈥淭hese investment scams prey on people鈥檚 trust in reputable brands and mimic investment firms and banks closely. No organisation is immune from impersonation.

鈥淎nyone seeking financial services should contact investment firms through their official New Zealand-based websites and never via unprompted online contacts, emails, links or phone numbers sent directly to them, or on other websites they find on the internet.鈥

An ASB spokeswoman said transtasman banks learned in January that customers were being targeted by online ads offering term deposit rates significantly higher than the market, and issued warnings about the scam.

When ASB became suspicious about O鈥橬eil鈥檚 transfer, it froze the remaining funds and sought an explanation from the recipient account holder.

鈥淲e have returned the sum of money, which was available in the ASB account at the time the fraudulent activity was identified and the account frozen.

鈥淲here funds have been on-sent either within New Zealand or overseas, we will do our best to recover those from the receiving bank.鈥

ASB had provided all requested information to police.

Waitemat膩 CIB Detective Senior Sergeant Ryan Bunting聽said police were investigating a fraud where the victim lost a significant amount of money to a bogus term deposit scheme.

鈥淭his is an emerging scam but is the latest in a long line of schemes designed to deceive people for financial gain.鈥

Scammers behind these schemes usually resided overseas, which posed challenges around enforcement action, Bunting said.

Police were making inquiries into the New Zealand-based account the $100,000 was deposited.

A Citibank spokeswoman said scammers in New Zealand were impersonating its brand. People should be vigilant when receiving 鈥渦nsolicited offers from unknown parties鈥.

Citibank did not offer financial products or services to retail clients, or email unsolicited investment offers to individuals.

TIPS TO AVOID SCAMS

  • Scams continue to evolve and use more sophisticated methods to deceive the public 鈥 the age-old saying 鈥渋f it sounds too good to be true, it probably is鈥, is a good rule of thumb.
  • Police encourage people to research 鈥渂roker鈥 companies online before engaging with them.
  • Scammers will pose as brokers for a number of established banks.
  • The Financial Markets Authority publishes the names of suspicious companies on their website.
  • Always talk to your bank or another financial professional before making large online investments.
  • If returns are higher than usual,it鈥檚 probably a red flag.Do your research and make sure the website is legitimate.

Source: NZ Police

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