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Listen: Scammers who used deepfake Luxon video to steal $224,000 caught on recording

Author
Lane Nichols,
Publish Date
Tue, 5 Nov 2024, 7:20am

Listen: Scammers who used deepfake Luxon video to steal $224,000 caught on recording

Author
Lane Nichols,
Publish Date
Tue, 5 Nov 2024, 7:20am

Scammers who used an AI-generated deepfake video of Christopher Luxon to steal $224,000 from a Taranaki grandmother have now been caught on a secret recording trying to extort even more money from the pensioner. 

The recorded conversations show the fraudsters attempting to regain 72-year-old Jill Creasy鈥檚 trust just months after siphoning her retirement savings to purchase Bitcoin, and coaching her on what to tell bank staff if questioned. 

The audio clips 鈥 obtained by the Herald and passed to authorities 鈥 also reveal the criminals鈥 cunning tactics and sophisticated scripts, designed to build false hope and rush victims into rash decisions. 

In a series of phone calls three weeks ago, so-called investment adviser Adam Manola and his 鈥渟upervisor鈥 Jessica asked Creasy why she had been uncontactable 鈥 and warned her she was at risk of losing her money. 

During the recordings, they say they can help Creasy recoup her huge cryptocurrency investment, but need immediate remote access to her computer so they can deposit nearly half a million dollars back into her account. 

鈥淛ill, we only care about you,鈥 Jessica tells the retiree. 

鈥淲e have been trying to reach you because you have lots of money that you鈥檝e been investing with us for quite some time and you鈥檝e made lots of profit. The only reason we tried to reach out to you was for your own safety, the safety of your funds.鈥 

鈥榃e don鈥檛 want to lose the money鈥 

Creasy saw the fake Luxon video on Facebook and alerted police and TSB after realising she鈥檇 been defrauded in August. 

In the recording, she tells the scammers she has been unwell and needs her money immediately returned for her treatment. 

鈥淵ou have to understand I鈥檝e been in hospital, and I want you to deposit my money into my TSB account.鈥 

Manola indicates he is happy to facilitate the deposit, but says Creasy needs to open software giving him remote access to her computer to 鈥渕ake sure everything is still working鈥. 

Jessica interrupts to say the company will not process the transfer without first checking 鈥渢hat the exchanges are actually available鈥. 

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to lose the money. There are many people who are not doing it in the right way and the funds are just lost.鈥 

Taranaki grandmother Jill Creasy, 72, lost $224,000 in an investment scam. She was tricked into investing in Bitcoin after seeing a deepfake video of Christopher Luxon recommending Kiwis invest in cryptocurrency.Taranaki grandmother Jill Creasy, 72, lost $224,000 in an investment scam. She was tricked into investing in Bitcoin after seeing a deepfake video of Christopher Luxon recommending Kiwis invest in cryptocurrency. 

Creasy says her eyes hurt and she wants to wait until tomorrow when someone can help her. 

Jessica warns that Creasy鈥檚 procrastination is costing the company money. 

鈥淚 don鈥檛 understand who do you need to help you. You have us. We want to help you to get the money into the bank.鈥 

Growing increasingly anxious, Creasy says she is relying on the pair to help refund her investment. 

鈥淚 am in a position where I need to get that money returned to me and I need your help to get it back and my only way of doing that is trusting in you.鈥 

Jessica responds: 鈥淵ou have all the trust Jill. We鈥檙e not going to go anywhere. 

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I want to help you,鈥 Jessica says. 鈥淧lease understand that we鈥檙e on the same side, we have the same interests. I want you to get your money back.鈥 

In another recording, Manola can be heard coaching Creasy on what to tell bank staff if questioned about a suspicious $10,000 payment he is attempting to arrange. 

Manola says the money involves an Auckland man鈥檚 ANZ account who is a 鈥減ersonal friend of mine鈥. 

He then pretends to be a TSB bank employee quizzing Creasy about the upcoming payment and reason for the money transfer. 

鈥淎nd by any chance are you dealing with a company on that?鈥 Manola asks. 鈥淪omebody guiding you or someone bloody working with you on any of this?鈥 

鈥淣o,鈥 Creasy replies. 

鈥淎re you sure?鈥 Manola asks. 

鈥淣o,鈥 Creasy responds. 

鈥淕ood, good, this is pretty much what you need to say,鈥 Manola tells the elderly victim, before instructing her to write the answers down. 

鈥業鈥檓 not the only one鈥 

Creasy told the Herald she knew the scammers had been trying to gouge more cash from her so recorded the phone calls in a bid to 鈥渃atch them out鈥. 

She hoped the evidence would be useful in identifying the fraudsters and holding them to account. 

Being scammed was a 鈥渃rime of shame鈥, Creasy said, with many victims too embarrassed to speak up. 

鈥淚 really feel as though I am a fool but I鈥檓 not the only one.鈥 

She felt Facebook was partly culpable for hosting paid scam advertisements and should refund her stolen money. 

鈥淢ark Zuckerberg is a multi-billionaire. It鈥檚 a pimple on his bum to pay me back my $224,000.鈥 

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. Photo / Mike Kai Chen for The New York TimesFacebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. Photo / Mike Kai Chen for The New York Times 

The Herald asked Facebook鈥檚 parent company Meta why it was hosting paid scam ads and whether it would accept responsibility and refund Creasy for her loss. 

A spokeswoman said the company did not want scams on its platform and was investing in technology to detect and stamp them out, including facial recognition technology to prevent 鈥渃eleb-bait scams鈥. 

鈥淭he safety of our users is of utmost importance. While no enforcement is perfect, our focus is towards tackling these issues at scale by investing in new technologies and methods to protect people on our service from these scams.鈥 

Fraud expert says recording reveal scammers鈥 鈥榩sychological tricks鈥 

A fraud expert told the Herald the recordings provided insight into the scammers鈥 tactics and 鈥減sychological tricks鈥. 

鈥淔ear of missing out, persuasion, and when that doesn鈥檛 work they use the pressure tactic - the supervisor - bring someone else in - the heavy hitter.鈥 

The victim was desperate and the scammers played on that desperation, the expert said. 

鈥淪he鈥檚 clearly vulnerable, she has health issues, probably not that computer savvy. All of that stuff just plays into the scammers鈥 hands.鈥 

The scammers were skilled and their scripts 鈥渨ord perfect鈥. They seemed to be operating from a large 鈥渂oiler room鈥 that was likely targeting thousands of global victims. 

Off-shore scammers are using complicated scripts and psychological tricks to hoodwink Kiwi victims into handing over their life savings. Off-shore scammers are using complicated scripts and psychological tricks to hoodwink Kiwi victims into handing over their life savings. 

They could be operating from South East Asia or the Philippines, 鈥渢hey could be anywhere.鈥 

The recordings provided valuable evidence for the finance sector about how scammers operated and the way they coached victims to help bypass interrogation from bank staff. 

Lane Nichols is deputy head of news and a senior journalist for the New Zealand Herald with more than 20 years鈥 experience in the industry. 

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