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HSI San Antonio Issues a Public Warning on Spoofing Phone Calls

 

The Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) department of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Texas has issued a warning about a new phone scam. Threat actors have been impersonating special agents at the San Antonio HSI to engage members of the public in the malicious campaign. The victims are informed that a problem with their passport has been discovered. The fake agent then threatens them with arrest unless they make a payment to the HSI. 

Officials with the San Antonio ICE said in a scam warning published November 4 that the scammers say the passport is linked to a crime and scare the caller by threatening to dispatch police to their home to arrest them. The fraudsters have devised a method of convincing the victim that the call is coming from the HSI San Antonio main phone number, 210-979-4500. 

HSI is a directorate of ICE and the primary investigative arm of the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS). It is responsible for investigating transnational crime and threats, particularly those perpetrated by criminal organizations that take advantage of the global infrastructure that facilitates international trade, travel, and finance. HSI's overseas presence is DHS's largest investigative law enforcement presence abroad and one of US law enforcement's largest foreign footprints.

“HSI special agents and local police do not call people on the phone to warn them they are about to be arrested,” said HSI officials. “Agents neither request financial information, such as bank account and credit card account information, nor demand money from someone to dismiss an investigation or remove an arrest warrant.”

"If you receive a threatening call or message from the number, do not give the person any personal or financial information, try to collect any contact information from the caller, end the conversation immediately if threats and intimidation persist, report the incident to the ICE tip line at 1 (866) 347-2423," added HSI officials. 

International students studying in the United States on student visas were informed in July by ICE officials in Virginia that their phone number was being faked to fool them into making fraudulent payments and disclosing sensitive personal information. Scammers behind the campaign demanded Bitcoin payments from international students, a currency that the federal government does not recognize.

Bengaluru: Passport offices alerts public against fake websites


Bengaluru: Passport offices throughout the country are apprehensive about the increase in fake websites that masquerade as official portals for passport related services and siphon off applicant's data and money.

The ministry has been issuing advisories and alerts on its social media handles to caution the public against such fraudulent websites. The crime branch, working with the ministry has also started awareness drives in order to prevent passport applicants from being duped by bogus.

 The fake websites that the offices caught were-
 www.indiapassport.org,
 www.online-passportindia.com,
 www.passport-seva.in,
 www.passport-india.in,
 www.passportindiaporlal.in and www.applypassport.org. (Sc.TOI)

Whereas, the official website to apply for a passport is- "www.passportindia.gov.in" and the official mobile application to avail passport related services is - "mPassport Seva".

Victims who were cheated by these bogus websites and mobile applications approached the passport office and filed complaint at the local police station, said Officials at the Regional Passport Office, Bengaluru. Not only websites but mobile applications and brokers outside the passport offices also demand more payment and could be stealing personal data like Adhaar Card, Voter Id, resident proof and birth certificate to partake in more serious crimes like identity theft or selling the data to immigrants.

The officials said they came across websites that charged unwarranted prices for filling up online forms for a new passport and other services and even people who were highly educated fell victim to the fraud. Where the real cost for a passport is Rs.1,500 for normal and Rs.3, 500 for tatkal, these fraudsters are charging from Rs. 4,500 to Rs. 6,000. And money is the lighter concern, the bigger threat is the theft of personal data like Adhar Number, Voter ID and phone connections.

These websites used logos of other government schemes like Swachh Bharat Abhiyan to appear more genuine and true. Even on Google Play Store, at least eight unauthenticated and false applications were found.

This problem is not centrist to Karnataka, as cases from all over the country have been popping up, for instance, NCR and Bhuvaneshwar being two of the areas. Bharath Kumar Kuthati, regional passport officer, Bengaluru, says "they are creating awareness by issuing warnings on social media. It is a pan-India problem and the department is taking steps to counter it."