Losing $450,000 in Three Days: Hackers Trick Victims Into Big Wire Transfers

Discussion in 'Serious Discussion' started by MS_User, Feb 24, 2020.

  1. MS_User

    MS_User MDL Guru

    Nov 30, 2014
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    Losing $450,000 in Three Days: Hackers Trick Victims Into Big Wire Transfers

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    In 2018, Frank Krasovec took on a $1 million personal line of credit from PlainsCapital Bank. A few months later, he went on a business trip. When he returned, $450,000 was missing.
    Mr. Krasovec, the chairman of Dash Brands Ltd., which owns Domino’s Pizza Inc. franchises in China, said he soon learned that someone had hijacked his email and asked his assistant to wire the money to a Hong Kong account.
    Fraudsters are stealing billions of dollars each year through this type of scam, which combines sophisticated hacking with wire transfers, an old-fashioned but efficient way to move money overseas. Banks and law-enforcement officials are struggling to curb the problem, while victims like Mr. Krasovec say they are finding it nearly impossible to get their money back.

    Years ago, lenders only had to worry about real-life bank robbers. Now, the wire-transfer scam puts them in a tough position. Customers expect them to move money quickly for legitimate transactions, while also guarding against hackers that have infiltrated clients.
    The largest banks are most likely to be conduits for the wire-transfer scams, according to the American Bankers Association. But community banks, with much smaller technology budgets to build their defenses, are also vulnerable.
    The Federal Bureau of Investigation received reports of nearly $1.8 billion in losses from this type of scam in 2019, up from about $1.3 billion the prior year. The agency estimates total losses world-wide, which include those not reported to the agency, were $26 billion between June 2016 and July 2019. The transfers primarily go to banks in Hong Kong and mainland China, where chances of recovering the money are slim, the agency said.
    Victims include “the elderly, college students, nonprofits, religious organizations, celebrities, CEOs of companies,” FBI Supervisory Special Agent Zacharia Baldwin said in an interview. “It could be anybody.”
    Hackers can break into a target’s email by trying out passwords made public in previous data breaches. They also may use phishing schemes like those used against political campaigns and in corporate espionage. The hackers then commandeer an account and impersonate the victim, asking assistants or colleagues to initiate a wire transfer.

    Mr. Krasovec, 76 years old, isn’t sure how his email was compromised. He said he believes the fraudsters, once inside his servers, tracked his travel plans and waited until he was out of the office to message his assistant.
    “Carol…please wire $150,000,” the hackers wrote Mr. Krasovec’s assistant from his email account, the executive said. It was around 11:30 p.m. in Shanghai, where Mr. Krasovec had landed hours earlier and was fast asleep, he said.
    Unlike cruder scams that might ask for money in broken English, the note sounded just like him. An attachment with transfer instructions showed intimate knowledge of his accounts, he said.
    The assistant asked PlainsCapital Bank to wire the money. The Dallas-based community bank had courted Mr. Krasovec’s business for months, he said, after poaching his longtime banker at Wells Fargo & Co.
    PlainsCapital called his assistant to confirm the request, then made the transfer. The bank declined to comment.
    Meanwhile, in China, Mr. Krasovec powered through 14-hour workdays unaware anything was amiss. The pizza chain has grown quickly there after switching to a local menu that includes seafood toppings.
    Three days after the first transfer, at 10:26 p.m. local time, intruders asked Mr. Krasovec’s assistant to wire another $300,000, according to Mr. Krasovec. The hackers had changed Mr. Krasovec’s email settings so their correspondence was quickly deleted, according to Kyle Camp, a technology consultant who examined the hack for Mr. Krasovec.
    A few days later, Mr. Krasovec flew home to Austin. Catching up in their offices overlooking Lady Bird Lake, his assistant mentioned she “took care of the wires.”

    “What wires?” he recalls saying.
    When she explained, he said he began to feel “absolutely sick.”
    He frantically called his banker at PlainsCapital Bank, who said there was nothing the bank could do. Mr. Krasovec said the bank then stopped returning his calls.
    He is now suing PlainsCapital, saying he shouldn’t have to repay the stolen money because the bank failed to put proper antifraud controls in place.
    PlainsCapital Bank said in a court filing that the loss was “undoubtedly the fault of [Mr. Krasovec’s] own failure to implement appropriate internal controls to prevent his company and its employees from falling victim to a third-party scam.” The bank said in filings that Mr. Krasovec must repay the money with interest.
    The case is continuing in the Texas court system.
    Under decades-old consumer-protection laws, consumers are often entitled to refunds of unauthorized charges. But that generally doesn’t apply to wire transfers requested after a customer was tricked by hackers, according to the American Bankers Association.
    Sometimes, consumers who catch the fraudulent wires can halt them by immediately calling their bank, said Don Vilfer, an investigator who works on these cases. But that isn’t certain: One law firm called Bank of America Corp. about an hour after a fraudulent request, but still lost $500,000, according to court documents. Bank of America declined to comment.
    Some banks try to prevent fraud by calling the customer to confirm large wire-transfer requests. Mr. Krasovec said PlainsCapital Bank should have called him, not just his assistant. The bank declined to comment beyond its court filings.
    Mr. Krasovec has put in place tougher passwords and two-factor authentication, said Mr. Camp, the technology consultant. Legal costs have added $300,000 to his already-sizable loss, and he is concerned about his reputation.

    “It makes me look like a dummy,” he said of the fraud.
     
  2. kaljukass

    kaljukass MDL Guru

    Nov 26, 2012
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    It is unlikely that this is the work of hackers.
    This is to use the bank's inside information and nothing else.
    This so called hacker sits in the same pank and smiling...
     
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  3. MS_User

    MS_User MDL Guru

    Nov 30, 2014
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    i dont think so if is a bank inside job the Feds would sniff it out that is the first thing law enforcement would look at.
     
  4. Joe C

    Joe C MDL Guru

    Jan 12, 2012
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    #4 Joe C, Feb 25, 2020
    Last edited: Feb 26, 2020
    It is a different type of attack called "Social Engineering" Where they (the malicious party) convinced his assistant that Mr. Krasovec needed this capital asap.
    https://www.webroot.com/ie/en/resources/tips-articles/what-is-social-engineering
    Getting his itinerary for his flight and the flight times is where the true hack came from, and that could have been posted on some social web site like face book. I do not think these peeps actually needed to access his server to pull this off, because spoofing an email addy is common for the criminal element today
     
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  5. PROBLEMCHYLD

    PROBLEMCHYLD MDL Novice

    May 6, 2013
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    This is why I don't do any transactions online. I'm walking into the bank. I use prepaid cards for online purchases. People haven't learned to quit relying on technology for everything. If they don't, they'll always be a victim of a scheme.
     
  6. gorski

    gorski MDL Guru

    Oct 21, 2009
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    It's BS all round - like one phone call would not clear it up and like no one can wait till phone call is done, like there are no safeguards for that kinda money like.... BAH! MORONS, THE LOT OF THEM!!! (If this is true...)
     
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  7. boyonthebus

    boyonthebus MDL Expert

    Sep 16, 2018
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    This is the most common form of hacks. Get someone to give you information over the phone, or get someone to download and run a malicious program. It is all social engineering and there was a good article about it on ReCode.
     
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  8. WindowsGeek

    WindowsGeek MDL Expert

    Jun 30, 2015
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    yes this article is real his assistant was the one who screw up and got trick into wiring the money.
     
  9. John Sutherland

    John Sutherland MDL Addicted

    Oct 15, 2014
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    It only proves something I've been saying for years: Any large organization is only as good as it's worst employee. Doesn't matter if it's a hospital, a public school, or the car dealership that works on your car. One bad employee can ruin the reputation of everyone they work with.
     
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