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FIGHTING_INTERNET_AND_BUSINESS_SCAMS_-_THE_21ST_CENTURY_BACKGROUND_CHECK
| FIGHTING INTERNET AND BUSINESS SCAMS - THE 21ST CENTURY BACKGROUND CHECK
You would think that the internet scam artists would take a
vacation from bilking unsuspecting victims during such recent
natural disasters as hurricane Katrina, and the tsunami that
killed over a quarter million people right after Christmas. “Not
so.”, says Jim Merrick of Click First, a one stop online
informational portal that provides background information about
businesses and individuals (www.clickfirstlinks.com). Merrick
warns that some people have no mercy when it comes to fraud.
“Just look at what happened recently after hurricane Katrina”,
states Merrick, “internet scammers posing as the Red Cross have
been collecting funds via unsolicited emails. Can you believe
it? These guys just never give it a rest.”
More than half the donations to the Red Cross have come over the
Internet, but a number of scam sites have cropped up that
emulate the Red Cross Web page. In some cases, after users
donate to a fraudulent outlet, the site instantly links to the
official Red Cross page, so givers continue to think they've
just given to the Red Cross. In other instances, e-mail messages
asking for donations include a link to a phony charity.
Merrick also details what occurred after Christmas, several days
after the tsunami caused by underwater shifts in the seabed
ravaged the coastline of dozens of countries lining the Pacific
and Indians oceans. “One group posed as a well known
international aid group named Oxfam,” describes Merrick while
sitting in the offices of Click First, “[the group] sent an
email message that appeared to be from the disaster relief
agency branch of Hong Kong which urges readers to deposit money
into a bank account in Spain. Oxfam officials contacted police
about the scam after finding out.”
Merrick goes on to say that people who are fooled into sending
funds aren’t always the elderly, who are normally the prime
candidates for being taken. “I started Click First because I was
burned for over $70,000 by a complex business scheme”, laments
Merrick. “What threw me off is that I actually did what I
thought was a pretty thorough job of online detective work.”
Merrick relied on his long time banker to advise him on sources
of capitol for a new business he was starting up. The banker
referred Merrick to a gentleman who had carefully concealed his
true background through an identity theft committed years
earlier. Even after Merrick had brought in a former law
enforcement professional, who had access to government
databases, he was still hoodwinked by the misguided talents of
this experienced thief. “If that guy used half of his abilities,
engaged in a legitimate profession, he would be a millionaire.”
stated Merrick.
Internet scams and complex business fraud are fast becoming the
leading type of non-violent crime in the country. Just days
after Hurricane Katrina struck, the FBI's top cyber-crimes
official, Chris Swecker, Assistant Director of the FBI's
Criminal Investigative Division, said the FBI had already opened
eight investigations into potentially fraudulent sites related
to hurricane Katrina. Swecker declined to say exactly how many
investigations are open at present.
Online scammers robbed Americans of more than $437 million in
2003, mostly using stolen identities, fake Internet auctions and
fraudulent shop-at-home schemes according to the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC). In its year-end Consumer Fraud and ID Theft
Report, the FTC said it received more than half a million
consumer complaints during 2003, a 40 percent jump over
complaints in 2002. More than 40 percent of all complaints were
related to identity theft and other Web-related scams.
Small businesses are more prone to fraud than large companies.
Small businesses experience fraud losses at a rate 200 times
that of the largest businesses, with more than 50 percent of
frauds involving losses of less than $100,000, according to a
2002 survey from the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners.
Seventy-five percent of fraud is not detected or reported and
costs the average business 0.5 percent to 2 percent of its gross
revenue. The annual cost of fraud in the United States is $600
billion.
Merricks solution to this ever growing problem was to develop a
turn key business and private individual background check portal
that could achieve accurate results in just 3 clicks. “The
problem that I encountered, when I was trying to protect myself
and my colleagues, was that there was no all encompassing web
site or source of information I could go to”, discusses Merrick,
“there were several places I could retrieve information, but
none were linked to the other, and the fellow that scammed our
group new the weak points and took advantage of the system.”
Using the Click First site you can, in three clicks or less,
find information on any doctor, lawyer, accountant, contractor,
or do a complete background check on those people that you are
potentially going to deal with. The Click First site also has a
special “Scam Watch” alert on the home page, which provides
information about the most popular or current scams.
Billy Mays, a nationally known spokesman for name brand
products, was drawn to Merrick’s project because of its consumer
protection function. Mays stated bluntly that “You can’t afford
not to know” the information that Click First provides. Mays is
now actively involved in the development end of the business.
Unscrupulous individuals aren’t going to go away or take a
hiatus when disasters affect the masses. The internet can either
be the tool of the criminal element or the defensive shield
protecting the vigilant. Jim Merrick decided that he didn’t need
to make the same mistake twice, and in fact went a step further
when he developed the 3 click fraud protection system designed
for businesses or individuals. “Why let these cyber thugs take
advantage of the honest guy?” proclaims Merrick. “The technology
was there to stop them. I just stepped up and said enough was
enough.” Let this being a warning to those who are planning new
scams—a new sheriff is in town.
Bruce Prokopets Executive Editor Press Direct International
www.pressdirectinternational.org
About the author:
Bruce Prokopets, Executive Editor of Press Direct International
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