HM Revenue
& Customs (HMRC) is warning taxpayers to be vigilant
following a surge of fake ‘phishing’ emails sent out by
fraudsters, following the 31 January Self Assessment tax return
filing deadline.
The email informs the recipient they are due a tax rebate, and
provides a click-through link to a replica of the HMRC website.
The recipient is asked to provide their credit card details.
Fraudsters then try to take money from the account using the
details provided. Victims risk having their bank accounts emptied
and their personal details sold on to other organised criminal gangs.
In the last three months, HMRC has shut down 99 websites that
were responsible for sending out the fake tax rebate emails.
Chris Hopson, Director of Customer Contact at HMRC, said:
“As a matter of policy, HMRC will only ever contact customers who
are due a tax refund in writing by post. If anyone receives an
email offering a tax rebate claiming to be from HMRC, we recommend
they send it to phishing@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk
before deleting it permanently.”
HMRC thoroughly investigates phishing attacks and works with
other law enforcement agencies in the UK and overseas. In the last
18 months, scam networks have been shut down in a number of
countries, including Austria, Mexico, the UK, South Korea, the
USA, Thailand and Japan.
HMRC strongly advises customers to:
Check the advice published at www.hmrc.gov.uk/security to see if
the email you have received is listed;Forward suspicious emails to
HMRC at phishing@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk and then delete it from your
computer/mail account;Do not click on websites, links contained in
suspicious emails or open attachments; andFollow advice from
www.getsafeonline.co.uk.
If you have reason to believe that you have been the victim of an
email scam, report the matter to your bank/card issuer as soon as
possible. If in doubt, please check with HMRC at www.hmrc.gov.uk/security/fraud-attempts.htm.
Notes to Editors
1. The scam email often begins with a sentence such as “We have
reviewed your tax return and our calculations of your last year’s
accounts show a tax refund of XXXX is due.” 2. The current
increase in scam emails is partly due to people following HMRC
advice and forwarding them to the department’s online reporting
facility. 3. In September 2009, a record 83,000 phishing attempts
were reported to HMRC. The following month, an unprecedented
10,000 reports of phishing scams were made to HMRC on one day
alone.NAT 07/11 Issued by HM Revenue & Customs Press
Office Press enquiries only please contact:
Contacts:
HMRC Out of Hours
Phone: 07860 359544
NDS.HMRC@coi.gsi.gov.uk
Sara Gaines
Phone: 020 7147 0394
sara.gaines@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk
Jonathan Hall
Phone: 020 7147 0052
jonathan.hall@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk