Bedfordshire Police are warning
people again to be careful about cash scams which promise easy
money.
Officers are dealing with at
least two cases where people have applied to a company for a loan, only to be
asked to provide money upfront in order to secure it.
Needless to say, after the
initial money has been found by hard-up residents, the promised loan never
materialises and the applicants are left even worse off than
before.
Police are warning people that
they should never pay up front for a loan and only deal with reputable
companies.
It is not dissimilar to the
better known scam of doing a foreign national a favour by receiving money into
your bank account on his behalf, or where unsuspecting residents receive
notification they have won a lottery. In both cases, in order to secure your
share of this free money, you must pay cash up front before you receive the big
money, which never arrives.
In the latest swindle, innocent
members of the public are being asked to pay up front in Ukash
vouchers.
Ukash is a genuine and reputable
company which allows cash to be exchanged for a voucher number at a local shop.
The voucher can then be used to pay for goods and services over the internet or
phone, rather than using a credit card or Paypal.
In the current scams, the
fraudster sets up a company offering unsecured loans, similar to the popular
short term pay-day loan companies. Aimed at people who would struggle to get
credit elsewhere because of poor credit rating, it lures often-desperate people
in by offering instant loans.
A couple who applied for a £3000
loan contacted Bedfordshire Police last month, saying they had been told their
application to a company called Easy Loan had been successful, and all they
needed to do was pay £90 over the phone to the company using Ukash vouchers.
The loan money would then appear in their bank account within 10
minutes.
They provided the voucher number
to a person who claimed to be in London – but the loan never arrived in their
bank account. The fraudster even had the cheek to ask for another £195 to
provide “proof to the government” – which luckily was not
paid.
PC Angelina Aylward, of the
Local Policing Operations team in Bedford, said: “It’s the second case in a
short space of time I’ve dealt with and I’m sure these are not the only two. The
police are in a difficult position as the victim only contacts the police once
an incident has occurred. I felt extremely sorry for the couple that came to the
police station and feel that it’s important that we raise
awareness.”
Any other victims in the area
who have not reported this to the police should contact www.actionfraud.org.uk the government
agency responsible for investigating and recording lower-scale fraud and scams.
Action Fraud can also be contacted via telephone on 0300 1232040. Ukash can
also be contacted for advice on 0808 2346244 or via www.Ukash.com. Both organisations advise never
to pay up front for a loan and never use Ukash vouchers to pay for something in
this way.
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