People in Jersey are being warned about a wave of death threat emails from fraudsters.
The Jersey Financial Services Commission and the Joint Financial Crimes Unit have raised the alert following reports of intimidating ransom emails, where the recipient or their family’s lives are threatened.
The emails threaten people into making a Bitcoin payment in order to avoid them or their family members being hurt, or a hit man making an attempt on their lives.
The JFSC describe the emails as “relatively unsophisticated” but say they still need to be treated with caution.
In a statement, the regulator said: “As people receive many unsolicited spam emails, and have become increasingly immune to basic scams, perpetrators as a result are either using more threatening methods; or utilising personal information, often mined from social media networks such as Facebook and LinkedIn, to try to make their attacks appear more genuine.”
What to do if you receive a threatening email? The JFSC say…
- The JFSC and the JFCU take these allegations very seriously, although we do not believe that there is a credible threat of the actions being pursued.
- Nevertheless we recommend anyone who has fallen victim to or believes they have been targeted by this scam to contact the JFCU [email protected] and in addition if you are a regulated financial services provider to contact your supervisor at the JFSC.
- Anyone who has received emails or text messages of this nature should not otherwise action them – do not respond and do not send any money to the fraudsters.
Access to Bitcoin and other untraceable crypto currencies is making such threats more common and follows other concerns about their use and misuse.