Marbella Fraudster Stole Dentities To Con Expat Out Of ‘Thousands’
A DUTCH fraudster stole the identity of a leading financial
advisor to con tens of thousands of euros out of a British expat.
Operating in Malaga, the con-artist assumed the identity of
a fund manager Harvey Sidhu at BlackRock – a globally recognised firm in London
– even including an almost identical email address.
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority has now put a warning
out on the scam following the Olive Press’s intervention.
It comes after retired businessman Mervyn Hopkins, who lives
with his wife Cathy and children near Valencia, lost ‘tens of thousands of
euros’ before realising he was being scammed.
He only rumbled the con when he was about to place another
€10,000 into the investment fund and noticed that the account details were
slightly different from previous times.
Then, after confirming the ruse from the real BlackRock
company, he attempted to turn the tables on his scammer claiming he needed to
withdraw money due to illness.
However, after weeks of tense negotiation, the pretend
BlackRock employee clammed up and inevitably failed to follow through on his
promise to return the money.
The person behind the fake blackrockfundmanagers.com email
account has been idenitified as a Dutch expat living in Marbella. He has been
implicated in fraud before.
“The scam is very clever, there was nothing else I could
have done to have discovered this was a fraud,” said Mr Hopkins, who lives off
a portfolio of assets and the sale of his UK online computer business.
He initially received a call from a ‘Harvey Sidhu’, fund
manager at BlackRock, after filling out an online form to find investment
suggestions.
Both the registration number for Sidhu and the company were
legitimate and the company is well-known, so Mr Hopkins proceeded to invest in
this ‘brilliant fund’.
However, the stocks – in an American technology supermarket
– predictably plummeted in January.
But this didn’t stop ‘Sidhu’ from persuading him that all
was not lost and that he should invest in another UK fund from Blackrock – an
actual legitimate fund, which can even be tracked online.
Not only was Mr Hopkins in regular contact with ‘Sidhu’, he
was receiving a monthly performance evaluation email from the ‘director of
operations’ at Blackrock – John Hogg.
But after noticing the change in the account address, he
couldn’t get through to Harvey so contacted the head office to check with John
Hogg.
“Hogg told me he would never email clients and that it was
done by others. He then went to talk to Harvey who said he didn’t know my name
and hadn’t dealt with me.”
“We both started to panic.”
Together they have traced the IP address on the fake
Harvey’s emails to a property just outside Malaga.
But after filing the case with the Spanish national police
and interpol, he continued to play along with ‘Harvey’ as if nothing were
wrong.
He then phoned him and explained that he had lost everything
and would ‘unfortunately need to withdraw all of his money’.
Bizarrely, the imposter continued contact and agreed to
this, promising to release the money. However, after several delays he
disappeared and has not made contact again.
This week BlackRock told the Olive Press: “We are working
with the regulator to help assist them eradicate these kinds of scams.”
“This is a ‘clone firm’; and fraudsters usually use this
tactic when contacting people out of the blue, so you should be especially wary
if you have been cold called.
“They may use the name of the genuine firm, the ‘firm
reference number’ or other details.”
The case is currently being investigated by the UK police
and the Financial Conduct Authority has published a specific warning regarding
the scam.
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