Taxpayers beware: CRA email rebate scam on the rise this tax season - Action News
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Taxpayers beware: CRA email rebate scam on the rise this tax season

An email scam offering people an instant tax refund is on the rise in Canada this tax season.

Phoney emails offering instant tax refund making the rounds in Canada

A person holds a tablet that displays an online income tax form.
The Canada Revenue Agency says if you receive an email offering you a tax refund, ignore it. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Kathie Weiss-Lefebvre ofToronto got a tempting offer in her emailthis week. The sender claimed to be the Canada Revenue Agency and said she was set to receive a $896.70 tax refund by way of an Interac e-Transfer.

All she had to do was click on a link.

Fortunately,Weiss-Lefebvreknew immediatelyit was a scam: she hasn't even filed her 2016 tax return. But she believes some people might fall for it.

"It's the most convincing piece of spam that I've ever received," she said. "It was very subtle, it didn't have grammatical errors, it didn't look badly sort of cut and pasted."

Theemailincluded copies of both a Bank of Montreal and anInteraclogo.

Kathie Weiss-Lefebvre of Toronto received this phoney CRA email, which promised her a nice tax rebate.

The CRA saysthere's been a surgein this type of email scam this tax season. "It seems to be fairly widespread," said spokesperson Paul Murphy.

He said the promised rebate could be enough to tempt someone to click on the link and fall into a trap.

Weiss-Lefebvredidn't dare click. If she had, Murphy suspects it would have taken her to a web page where she would'vebeen asked for personal details such as a credit card or social insurance number and/or banking information.

The fraudstercould then use that information for criminal activity like identity theft.

Murphy saidthe CRA would never offerdetailsabout atax rebate, request personal information or include an unsolicited link in anemail.

Fraudsters strike twice

CRA scams aren'tnew but fraudsters keep inventing new schemes, hoping tofind just the right formula to trick taxpayers.

"They've been mutating, evolving, taking different angles and trying to persuade people that this is legitimate,"Murphy said.

A popular one for years involves a fraudster posing as a CRA agent on the phone.

The victim is told they owe money in taxes and must pay up quickly ortheir assets will be frozen and police will arrest them.

The RCMP says the CRA phone scam is also back on the rise.

The RCMPsaysit noticeda huge decrease in this type of fraud last year, following the arrest of 70 people suspected of conducting tax scams at call centres in India.

However, the Mounties say the phone scam is once again on the rise and has spawneda new version: a fraudsterposingas a CRA official emails apast victim and offers to refund the stolen money.

The catch: the victim has to pay a five per cent administration fee.

"They have no concern whatsoever for the impact on the victim," saidSgt. John Mecher of the RCMP's financial crimes unit in Milton, Ont.

ScammertoRCMP: stop interfering

Recently, a CRA phone scam victim who was bilked out of a whopping $100,000 in 2015 was speaking with an RCMP investigator when she revealed what she thought was good news.

"She says to us, 'Oh, by the way, I think I'm going to be able to get a refund,'" Mecher said.

But the woman, who's in her 50s, had actually been dupedagain. She thought she'dbeen speaking with the CRAand was prepared to pay the fraudster a$5,000 fee to get her money back.

Fortunately, the investigator intervened and the woman didn't send the cash. She continued to receiveharassing phone calls from the scammer, so Mecher told the woman to ask the fraudster to contact him.

He was floored when the man actually did, presenting himself as David Carter from the CRA.

"He dug in and basically started berating me for interfering in this nice lady's affairs," the Mountie said.

"They're driven by the money, and anything that comes in their way, they're willing to try to push it aside, even if it means trying to convince the police that we're interfering in a legitimate practice."

Losses in the millions

Mecher saidsince 2014, the federal government's Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre has received more than 42,000 complaints about either CRA phone scams or a similar fraudtargeting Canadian immigrants. Total victim losses have amounted to more than $6.5 million.

The CRA says it would never ask you to send personal financial information in an email. (Shutterstock)

The numbers associated withCRAemailscams are much lower: about 7,000 complaints and $200,000 in financial losses from 2014 to 2016. Butthe real financial lossesfor suchemail fraud would be very difficult to quantifybecause it often involves stealing financial information for future crimes.

Mecher also saidmost financial scam victims don't report the crime or their losses out of embarrassment.

"People would rather eat the cost of their loss versus telling anybody."

The only way to put a stop to these CRA scams, he said,is to educate people and spread the word.