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Nigerian Scammers Allegedly Hit Washington State Unemployment Office - Crime - Nairaland

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Nigerian Scammers Allegedly Hit Washington State Unemployment Office by Mikeiron78(m): 2:59pm On May 26, 2020
More than $100 million has disappeared from the Washington State Unemployment Office and officials there are blaming Nigerian scammers.

The head of the state’s Employment Security Department said impostors have used stolen information from tens of thousands of people to fraudulently receive hundreds of millions of dollars in unemployment benefits, San Francisco Gate reported.

The U.S. Secret Service, part of the Department of Homeland Security, says the scammers are tied to an organized group — the Nigerian Scattered Canary criminal gang.

Scattered Canary used gmail to generate fraudulent accounts, file claims, and receive payments.

The scam group emerged about a decade ago and tends to target government services including unemployment fraud, social security fraud, disaster relief fraud and student aid fraud, according to Armen L. Najarian, CMO and chief identity officer of email security company Agari.

Scattered Canary is a Nigerian fraud ring that began in 2008. It started with just one actor dubbed “Alpha.” Alpha ran Craigslist scams with the help of a more seasoned mentor, dubbed “Omega,” AXIOS reported. The pair reportedly committed 419 total Craigslist scams, averaging $24,000 in profits. For 10 years, Agari has been tracking and gathering intelligence on the ring that has grown to include at least 35 people.

Washington state is working with federal law enforcement, financial institutions and the U.S. Department of Labor to recover the money paid out during the huge increase in joblessness from the coronavirus crisis, Commissioner Suzi LeVine said.

The scam has led to payments to the actual unemployed being delayed.

A U.S. Secret Service alert issued last week identified Washington state as the top target so far of a Nigerian ring seeking to commit large-scale fraud against state unemployment insurance programs, The New York Times and Seattle Times reported.

More than 1.1 million people in Washington state have filed for unemployment benefits since businesses started closing in March due to covid-19. But some of these were most likely fraudulently, officials said.

“These are very sophisticated criminals who have pretty robust collections of information on people, and they are activating and monetizing that information,” LeVine said.

The Nigerian scammers are hitting other targets too.

In the last nine weeks, 38.6 million people nationwide have filed for unemployment benefits, The Washington Post reported.

Scattered Canary recently attempted to exploit the CARES Act on May 17, filing two fraudulent unemployment claims through Hawaii’s Department of Labor and Industrial Relations website, SC Media reported.

“Since its inception, at least 35 different actors have joined Scattered Canary in its fraudulent schemes,” according to a recently released whitepaper on the gang. “The group has turned to a scalable model through which they can run multiple types of scams concurrently.”

In addition to a new rash of bogus claims in Hawaii, there have been at least 259 bogus other claims in Florida, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wyoming. In Washington, the latest figure of bogus claims has been in tens of thousands, according to reports. Considering unemployment claims are sent out weekly, and these bogus payments have been sent out over a nine-week period, this can quickly add up to millions of dollars.

The scams had been designed to take advantage of the CARES Act providing financial relief in the form of Economic Impact Payments (EIP). The bogus claims were tracked by email security company Agari.

Listen to GHOGH with Jamarlin Martin | Episode 71: Jamarlin Martin Jamarlin Martin discusses how J. Edgar Hoover’s goal to water down and neutralize strong Black politics involved informants and agents trading money and status for the water-down.

The fraudsters took advantage of cities and states that have been struggling to process an overflow of jobless claims amid the covid-19 pandemic and related government shutdowns, Business Insider reported.

Nigerian scammers are not relenting in the times of COVID-19.

A particular news item caught my attention this morning

"Nigerian fraudsters ripping off the unemployment system" – WIRED.

There's a so called Nigerian fraudster ring by name of "scattered canary" as reported.

— Oluniyi Gates (@OloyeGates) May 20, 2020

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Re: Nigerian Scammers Allegedly Hit Washington State Unemployment Office by IceLip: 3:06pm On May 26, 2020
Kiddies Hacker
Re: Nigerian Scammers Allegedly Hit Washington State Unemployment Office by StrikeBack(m): 3:55pm On May 26, 2020
shocked
Too bad
Re: Nigerian Scammers Allegedly Hit Washington State Unemployment Office by dangotesmummy: 4:24pm On May 26, 2020
They will soon meet their Waterloo

America doesn't back off till they nail thieves and criminals

They did it to one Obi in nairaland.i can't remember his name, they'll track this ones down

All their Instagram show off will stop

If God now want to finish them they should be tried by Judge Judy

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