We've
all seen them before. The late prince Abdul has left us millions in
inheritance and we need only provide a minor convenience fee to receive
the funds. Advanced fee scams are nothing new and have been circulating
the Internet since its inception. Until now, scammers have relied on
email correspondence and convincing legal jargon to con victims out of
their hard-earned dollars.
Recently, PhishLabs discovered an advanced fee scam with a twist - an
elaborate but faux bank website. The scam begins with a classic lure
purporting to be a lawyer from the African nation of Togo. The reader is
informed that the inheritance money is in a foreign bank account and a
link to the fake bank holding the funds is provided along with login
credentials. The fraudsters registered a fake domain name to further
deceive users.
The fake bank website was built from the ground up, even utilizing a database structure to handle user accounts.
Figure 1. MySQL database creation script for fake website.
The login page is easily mistaken for a legitimate banking login page
(see Figure 2). Once on the site, the user then enters the previously
provided login information.
Figure 2. Fake login page allowing users to log in to transfer funds in scam.
After logging in, the reader is shown a large account balance with a
conveniently placed transfer button. To boost confidence that the site
is authentic, the faux bank portal even includes functionally to edit
account details and upload a profile image.
Figure 3. Fake bank account showing available funds for transfer in advanced fee scam.
The user is asked for a required “Cost of Transfer Code” which
requires several thousand dollars - a small price to pay for a
soon-to-be millionaire. After agreeing to pay the fee, the curious
individual, now turned victim, can proceed with the fictitious
transfer.
Figure 4. Cost of transfer code ($3,200) required to “transfer” funds.
The victim is required to enter bank account details, further convincing him or her that funds will be transferred.
Figure 5. The fake login site requires bank account information to transfer funds.
The victim is taken through a series of convincing pages covering
everything from international banking details, to disclaimers, to
transfer progress pages. This convoluted fake banking site is all meant
to distract and delay the victim from realizing they've been duped.
Figure 6. Declarations and acceptance requirements designed to deceive victims.
Not the typical advanced fee fraud
Originally categorized as a phishing site, further analysis revealed
this scam to be much more than just a fake login page. Instead, the site
was designed to fool individuals into thinking it was a legitimate
banking portal with fake balances to deceive victims for advanced fee
fraud.
Financial institutions should be sure that account holders are aware
of such scams and are suspicious of emails purporting to offer lump sums
of money. This kind of scam not only has serious financial
repercussions for account holders but it is also very damaging to banks
that are being used to lure victims.
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