Every seven minutes today someone in Britain will fall victim to a money scam on Instagram, Facebook or WhatsApp, Lloyds Bank warns.

By the end of the day, hundreds of people will be out of pocket. The only hope scam victims have of getting their money back currently is reimbursement from their bank. 

Social media giant Meta has no obligations towards victims – even though scammers use their platforms to target them.

We have been inundated with emails from people who have been caught in the tidal wave of social media scams.

Here, we speak to victims of the social media swindlers…

Target: Celebrity hairdresser Ramona Mihalache fell prey to a social media scam, in which hackers posed as customer support after infiltrating her Instagram account

Target: Celebrity hairdresser Ramona Mihalache fell prey to a social media scam, in which hackers posed as customer support after infiltrating her Instagram account

When celebrity hairdresser Ramona Mihalache received a direct message on Instagram from a close friend asking her to endorse her flower shop as part of an online vote, she didn’t think twice.

A minute later Ramona received a text message on her mobile phone with the link to the vote which she clicked to open.

But the link had been set up by scammers and gave them instant access to her Instagram account.

Within minutes, the scammers posed as Ramona on her Instagram account and posted fake stories.

These went out to her 700 followers, including TV presenter Susanna Reid, supermodels at London Fashion Week and the cast of ITV soap Coronation Street, who are all clients of hers.

The stories showed photos of Ramona giving ringing endorsements of fake cryptocurrencies: ‘BITCOIN MINING has helped me achieve a lot.

‘I grabbed the opportunity of investing £2,000 and I got my profits of £20,000 within three hours of trading.’

It was only when her friends started messaging her about her ‘success’ with bitcoin mining that Ramona realised that she had fallen for a scam and her Instagram account had been hacked. 

‘I’m very active with my clients on Instagram and I was really worried they might get caught up in the scam too or invest and lose money, but I couldn’t do anything to take the posts down.

‘My reputation and livelihood were at stake.’

When Ramona attempted to log into her Instagram account she found her password had been changed.

So she sent a message to the site’s customer support for help.

Shortly after, she received a message on WhatsApp which showed the Instagram logo so she believed it was from the support team.

In fact, it was from the scammers who had sent her the original fake link.

It read: ‘Hello, this is Instagram support team, you made a request that your account was hacked and couldn’t log back in?’

She was told that she would receive a code as a text message and she was to share it with them in order to unlock her account.

Ramona was told that she could use her Facebook account to recover her Instagram account as they were linked.

But the scammers then told her that her Facebook account was also compromised so she would have to share the code for that too.

‘I was receiving so many messsages and codes, I still don’t know what was real and what wasn’t. I was just so worried about my account I was doing what they said,’ she adds.

Ramona unwittingly gave them full control of her social media platforms by exchanging passcodes.

‘They asked for ID to verify me and I sent my driving licence. I then got excited because they thanked me for it and said I had recovered my account.

‘It was only when they asked for a picture of my bank card that I realised I was being played.

‘Within hours I found myself locked out of everything — it was terrifying,’ she says.

By this point, the scammers had infiltrated her email addresses and Lloyds Bank account where they started to change her personal details.

She says: ‘I got very angry, stopped responding and called Lloyds to block my account.

‘I’m so glad I stopped them before they managed to take any money.

‘With my account frozen, I didn’t have access to any of my cash for weeks.

‘I came so close to losing my money. This ordeal has affected me so much emotionally though, I don’t know which messages to trust any more.’

Since then Ramona has created a new Instagram account and attempted to reconnect with her followers and warn them that her profile had been hacked.

To her knowledge, no one has lost money.

[email protected]

Fake WhatsApps from ‘daughter’ cost me £3K 

In one of the most common cons sweeping Britain, parents have been bombarded with WhatsApp messages from crooks posing as their children pleading for money.

Money Mail exposed the trick, dubbed the ‘Mum and Dad’ scam, more than 18 months ago.

When Danuta Wade received a message from her 33-year-old daughter Emma asking for a loan, she did not suspect a thing. After all, it was fairly common for the director of education to lend her money.

Warning: Money Mail exposed the trick, dubbed the 'Mum and Dad' scam, more than 18 months ago

Warning: Money Mail exposed the trick, dubbed the ‘Mum and Dad’ scam, more than 18 months ago

The text read: ‘Mum I’m not using the same number, my phone broke earlier. WhatsApp me on my new number 07X XXXX XXXX as soon as possible please x.’

Danuta was told that her daughter was in a phone shop and needed to borrow the cash but would pay her back in a few hours.

Danuta transferred £500 to a bank account of their choosing. ‘There was no reason for me to be suspicious. It’s not unusual for me to loan my daughter relatively large amounts of money; she always pays me back,’ says the mother-of-two from Essex.

But within an hour, another message came through. ‘Sorry to be a pain mum but I need to send the difference to the same account because I’m getting a bigger storage xx.’

Another £500 was promptly transferred. One hour later, a third request for money was made. This time for £1,000. ‘Hi mum could you please help me with another bill xx this is the last one I promise.’

The worried mother made the transfer but still her daughter came back for more — another £1,000.

It was when she received yet another text asking for £2,000 to pay for a deposit on a car that the mother twigged it was not her daughter at the other end of the phone.

When Danuta realised that Emma had not asked for any money she contacted her bank, Monzo, which refused a refund. However, since Money Mail intervened to show Monzo the typical style of message between mother and daughter, the bank has reviewed the evidence and returned her £3,000.

Facebook hack led to £400 credit card debt

Tricksters are now cracking into genuine profiles to make their bogus adverts more convincing.

Anyone with a profile on Facebook can pay to post an advertisement (for, say, a job, investment, or any goods they want to sell) that can be seen by a large number of people.

Steve Frewin  had not used Facebook to advertise his golfing business in more than three years. 

Hacked: Steve Frewin (pictured) said he received 'no help' from Facebook after scammers hacked into his account

Hacked: Steve Frewin (pictured) said he received ‘no help’ from Facebook after scammers hacked into his account

So the 55-year-old entrepreneur from Buckinghamshire was surprised to see a post on his account with a photo of a scantily clad lady advertising her personal services.

Scammers had hacked his account and managed to use an old credit card he had attached to it — even though it had expired.

After reporting the fraud and removing his card details from the account, Steve received a message from Facebook asking him to upload a new card to clear new payments made by the fraudster. His credit card was also charged £200 twice to pay for the advert’s listing.

Steve’s bank, NatWest refunded him the money, but he is appalled by the lack of support he has received from the social media giant.

‘The bank did their bit, but I’ve had no help from Facebook,’ he says. ‘I reported the fraud to them but have heard nothing back. My account is just sitting there, blocked.’

We had forty strangers turn up on our doorstep

More than eight million UK shoppers have fallen victim to fraud when buying online at least once in the past year, according to campaign group Get Safe Online. But chief among the most dangerous is Facebook Marketplace.

The buying and selling platform acts as a trading place for homeware, furniture, electricals, and even cars. 

Anyone with a Facebook profile can list an item they wish to sell and other users can then make an offer. However, loose rules and vetting systems mean fraudsters can fleece innocent people.

Question everything: Facebook Marketplace has been previously dubbed the 'Wild West of fraud' by one banking insider

Question everything: Facebook Marketplace has been previously dubbed the ‘Wild West of fraud’ by one banking insider

Sellers often appear to come from legitimate accounts but which have been hacked — and in some cases scammers use genuine home addresses. 

When a stranger knocked on Cara Vincent’s door in January to collect a virtual reality headset, she thought they had the wrong address. 

But over the following six months she had more than 40 visits from online shoppers who thought they had bagged a bargain on Facebook Marketplace.

They had paid up to hundreds of pounds for a secondhand gaming console or phone — and all were told to collect it from Cara’s address.

The 40-year-old mum, who asked for her name to be changed, says: ‘Some have got aggressive, so we had to hang a sign on our door and set up a camera doorbell.’

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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