Gardai issue warning about student accommodation fraud scams
As thousands of students prepare to either return to College or begin their third level education journey for the first time, Gardaí have issued a timely warning for people to be aware of student accommodation rental fraud scams.
While accommodation frauds have declined in recent months due to Covid 19 restrictions, Gardaí have highlighted that the new generation of 3rd level students seeking accommodation could be a target for fraudsters.
There were a total of 503 cases of rental scams reported to An Garda Siochana between February 1, 2019 and May 31 last, with almost half of the incidents occurring in the Dublin region.
Just over €900,000 was stolen in rental scams over this period, with 42% of all injured parties were under the age of 25 and 72% under the age of 35.
Detective Superintendent Michael Cryan of the Gardaí National Economic Crime Bureau has issued the following advice:
* You should only use recognised letting agencies or deal with people who are bona fida and trusted. Websites can be cloned, check the URL to ensure it’s a real website and take note of the privacy and refund policy sections.
* Be very wary of social media advertisements or where a person letting the location will only communicate via messenger or whatsapp. You should push for direct answers and if responses are vague disengage immediately.
* Watch out for unsolicited contacts or where the contact appears to be based in other jurisdictions and especially if there is a sense of urgency like "a one-time offer”.
* If you have decided to take up the offer only use trusted money transfer systems, I would recommend using a credit card. Never transfer money direct, pay cash, pay into cryptocurrency wallets.
* Be wary if a website is asking you to send money to a random PayPal address, wire it by Western Union, pay in iTunes gift cards or only deals in cryptocurrency. The majority of the time, those methods are done to avoid scrutiny and ensure that a transaction can’t be reversed