Military Spouses Increasingly Targeted in Online Quick-Money Scams

August 15, 2019

Military spouses and veterans seeking extra income are being warned to beware of overly high-paying job online job offers and other suspect income-generating schemes, Stars and Stripes reported.
Online scammers are increasingly imitating recognizable national brands like Walmart, Target and Best Buy to offer jobs with high pay or remote work with flexible hours, according to the report.
In particular, many scammers are frequently targeting military spouses aiming to defraud new victims under  “mystery shopper” schemes, a scam the Federal Trade Commission recently highlighted.
Targets are sent phony money orders or checks and are instructed to deposit the funds into their bank accounts, then later victims are instructed to withdraw hundreds or thousands of dollars and put that money into gift cards or send funds through Western Union, the FTC warns. Eventually, the victim will absorb the loss once the fake check eventually bounces, according to the FTC.
Consumers are warned to “never wire money or buy gift cards for a mystery shopping assignment or any job opportunity. Those are sure signs of a scam,” the FTC says.
Other scams targeting the military community have included offers to display a sign on a car or truck where victims have initially received a check and are later told to send back some bank funds to cover undisclosed costs. As in other scams, the initial check is phony and the victim absorbs the loss.
Another scam involves offers to buy materials for working from home where an email claims a job seeker’s resume has been found on Indeed.com, then the employer sends another email saying it will send funds for home office materials. The email instructions include depositing the forthcoming fraudulent funds, then withdrawing up to thousands in personal funds and depositing them into a different bank.
A final online scam involves online or on-the-spot interviews. Recently victims report doing a phony interview through Google Hangouts or another video chat service, or falling prey to on-the-spot job offers that don’t involve an interview, according to the report Stripes.com report.

August 15, 2019

Recent News

Nine Military Hospitals Receive Top Marks for Patient Safety

Nine Military Hospitals Receive Top Marks for Patient Safety

Nine military medical facilities received top grades for patient safety from the Leapfrog Group, a nonprofit watchdog, according to Military News. The assessment, part of Leapfrog’s Hospital Safety Grades program, evaluated over 30 performance measures at 3,000...

Wednesday Webinar on REPI Challenge Grant Proposals

Wednesday Webinar on REPI Challenge Grant Proposals

DOD Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration (REPI) Program leaders will host a webinar May 15 at 3 p.m. Eastern time to discuss REPI Challenge grant funding proposals and field questions from prospective applicants. You can join the webinar at this link....

Warren Highlights DCIP as Opportunity for Off-Base Housing Support

Warren Highlights DCIP as Opportunity for Off-Base Housing Support

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) suggested Wednesday that the Defense Community Infrastructure Program is one way to help solve the housing crunch in many military communities. The program, which Congress made permanent last year, provides grants for infrastructure...

DOD Names Higher Education Faculty Partners

DOD Names Higher Education Faculty Partners

DOD has chosen seven DOD-university faculty teams for the FY 2023 Defense Education and Civilian University Research (DECUR) Partnership, part of the Minerva Research Initiative, according to a press release. DECUR aims to enhance social science research collaboration...

Snap of the Week

Snap of the Week

Air Force Maj. Gen. Vanessa Dornhoefer greets a World War II veteran during a V-E Day ceremony at the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C. May 8. Air Force photo by Eric Dietrich

PAST STORIES