Thieves Flood Victim’s Phone With Calls to Loot Bank Accounts

By Kim Zetter
Wired.com

May 12, 2010  |  5:17 pm

http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/05/telephony-dos/


Bank thieves have rolled out a new weapon in their arsenal of tactics — 
telephony denial-of-service attacks that flood a victim’s phone with 
diversionary calls while the thieves drain the victim’s account of money.

A Florida dentist lost $400,000 from his retirement account last year in 
this manner, and the FBI said the attacks are growing.

A spokeswoman for the Communication Fraud Control Association — a 
telecom industry organization — told Threat Level that although 
fraudulent transfers have been halted in a number of cases, the losses 
are increasing.

“I know it’s in the millions,” said Roberta Aranoff, executive director 
of the CFCA. “It has exceeded a million dollars easily.”

Last November, Robert Thousand Jr., a semi-retired dentist in Florida, 
received a flood of calls to several phones. When he answered them, he 
heard a 30-second recording for a sex hotline, according to the St. 
Augustine Record.

In December, he discovered that $399,000 had been drained from his 
Ameritrade retirement account shortly after he’d received the calls. 
About $18,000 was transferred from his account on Nov. 23, with a 
$82,000-transfer following two days later. Five days after that, another 
$99,000 was drained, followed by two transfers of $100,000 each on Dec. 
2 and 4. The thieves withdrew the money in New York.

Thousand’s son, who shares his name, received similar harassing calls, 
though his financial accounts were not touched.  Thousand did not 
respond to a request from Threat Level for comment.

The FBI says the calls were a diversionary tactic, meant to tie up 
Thousand’s line so that Ameritrade couldn’t reach him to authenticate 
the money transfer requests. FBI spokesman Bryan Travers said AT&T, 
Thousand’s phone carrier, contacted the agency’s New Jersey office to 
help investigate the matter. The agency has since seen at least 16 
similar cases since November, most of them occurring in the last few weeks.

In some cases, the victims simply heard dead air when they answered 
their phone or heard a brief advertisement or other recorded message. 
Some victims had to change their phone numbers to halt the harassing calls.

The perpetrator who targeted Thousand created a number of VoIP accounts, 
which were used with automated dialing tools to flood the dentist’s 
home, business and cellphone with calls.

Generally in these cases, Travers said, the thief obtains the victim’s 
account information through some other means — perhaps through a 
phishing attack or other method — and then contacts the financial 
institution to change the victim’s contact information. In this way, the 
institution will call the thief instead of the victim to verify a money 
transfer request.

Many banks, however, now contact customers at their previous phone 
number when contact information on their account has changed.

But with these attacks, the institution’s calls are prevented from 
reaching the victim, whose phone is tied up with a flood of diversionary 
calls.

AT&T spokesman Marty Richter told Threat Level that the perpetrators 
then generally contact the financial institution posing as the victim to 
complain that a requested money transfer hasn’t gone through. When the 
institution discloses that it tried unsuccessfully to contact the victim 
to authenticate the transfer, the perpetrator says he’s been having 
phone troubles and verifies that the transfer should proceed.

Richter says that other telecommunication companies have been alerted to 
the problem and are warning customers when they call to complain about 
harassing calls that the issue may be related to their financial 
accounts. The victims are warned to place fraud alerts on their 
financial and credit bureau accounts and block any electronic fraudulent 
money transfers that may be in the works.

“This may appear to some people that they’re just having a connect issue 
with their phone carrier,” he said, “and we want to alert them that this 
may not be the case.”

Travers said that in most cases so far, the victims have acted quickly 
enough to prevent money from being drained from their accounts, but he 
says there may be many other cases that haven’t yet been reported to the 
FBI. He urged consumers who may have been victims to contact the FBI.

Read More 
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/05/telephony-dos/#ixzz0npiXCU7P

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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