20.5k unique visitors in the last 3 days

Spanish and Portuguese Police Arrest 54 Vishing Scammers

The crooks stole EUR2.5mn by combining scam phone calls with visits to the homes of victims.

Law enforcement in Spain and Portugal conducted 19 raids last month to tackle a gang of fraudsters that used a combination of phone calls and physical intimidation to steal at least EUR2.5mn (USD2.7mn) from 84 known victims. The raids, one of which is photographed above, resulted in 54 arrests and the seizure of evidence including computers, mobile phones and SIM cards. One of the arrested men was caught in the act of committing crime, with the bank details of his victim on screen at the moment police entered his house.

Spanish citizens were initially hit by phone calls from scammers who pretended to work for the victim’s bank. The victim was told that there was a problem with their bank account, and hence encouraged to reveal personal information. This information was then used by accomplices who visited the homes of targets with the intention of deceiving and pressurizing victims into allowing them inside. Once they were in the victim’s home, they then stole cash, bank cards and valuable items. Any banking details obtained from victims were used to take control of their accounts. A series of money mules assisted with laundering the proceeds through the gangsters’ accounts with Spanish and Portuguese banks.

Telecoms fraud management will remain inadequate if it continues to be focused solely on a narrow subset of technical and network crimes. We should be questioning how crooks are able to obtain large numbers of SIM cards, and can then use them to engage in the unorthodox behaviors involved in running scam call centers that make many outbound calls from a limited number of geographic locations. The historic lack of police action to tackle fraud had the knock-on effect of discouraging telco executives from employing investigators who would support criminal prosecutions and analysts who looked for a wider range of anomalous behaviors that could be indicative of crime. Now there are some signs of law enforcement making a more substantial effort to tie together hybrid crimes where the exploitation of communications networks is just one part of the criminal modus operandi. Police work needs to be backed by expert support from comms providers in order to protect society and to restore confidence in communications.

Eric Priezkalns
Eric Priezkalnshttp://revenueprotect.com

During his career, Eric has been a Director of Risk Management for a national telco, the Chief Executive of the Risk & Assurance Group, a Chief Marketing Officer for a software business, a consultant, a public speaker and the publisher of Commsrisk since its launch in 2006. Look here for more about the history of Commsrisk and the role played by Eric.

The comms providers that Eric has worked for include Qatar Telecom, Cable & Wireless, T‑Mobile, Sky and Worldcom. In addition to his proficiency at speaking about the current scamdemic, Eric is also a qualified chartered accountant and a subject matter expert in consumer protection, enterprise risk management, fraud prevention, data integrity and billing accuracy. Eric was the lead author of Revenue Assurance: Expert Opinions for Communications Providers, published by CRC Press. He can be reached through the contact form on this website.

Related Articles

The Commsrisk Global Fraud Dashboard


Our Global Fraud Dashboard uses AI-powered search to collate, update and visualize data about scams and other network abuses from around the world. New charts are added each month. See it here.

Get Our Weekly Newsletter by Email