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Wire Transfer

Houston Man Arrested For Phony $87K Wire Transfer: Gloucester Twp PD Houston Man Arrested For Phony $87K Wire Transfer: Gloucester Twp PD
Houston Man Arrested For Phony $87K Wire Transfer: Gloucester Twp PD A 64-year-old Houston man was arrested and charged after he tried to impersonate a customer at a bank in Gloucester Township, authorities announced Wednesday, March 4. At 12:52 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 26, officers responded to Fulton Bank at 1400 Blackwood Clementon Rd. after employees alerted officers to a man, later identified as David Hutton, attempting to execute a suspicious transaction, Gloucester Township police said. Hutton was impersonating a bank customer and attempting to complete a wire transfer in the amount of $87,500 out of the victim’s account, police said. Hutton was de…
Walmart To Pay $10M After Scammers Exploit Money Transfer Services, FTC Says Walmart To Pay $10M After Scammers Exploit Money Transfer Services, FTC Says
Walmart To Pay $10M After Scammers Exploit Money Transfer Services, FTC Says Walmart will pay $10 million and change its money transfer practices after federal regulators said the company let scammers steal hundreds of millions of dollars from Americans. Walmart agreed to the payout in a settlement, the Federal Trade Commission announced on Friday, June 20. The agency's three commissioners unanimously approved the final order. The FTC accused the retail giant of allowing fraudsters to misuse its wire transfer services between 2013 and 2018. "Electronic money transfers are one of the most common ways that scammers tell consumers to send them money, be…
Don’t Answer If You Get This Call, FBI Says Don’t Answer If You Get This Call, FBI Says
Don’t Answer If You Get This Call, FBI Says If you get a call from someone claiming to be the FBI or another government agency and threatens arrest unless you pay up, hang up. Scammers across the country are impersonating federal authorities and spoofing legitimate government phone numbers in a rising wave of fraud, authorities say. Victims are being told they face immediate arrest unless they send money via prepaid gift cards, wire transfers, cash, or cryptocurrency. The threats are fake, but the financial losses are very real. Here’s how the scam works: Caller ID spoofing — Scammers manipulate phone numbers so it looks like the …