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Richard Branson reveals how he was targeted by scammers seeking millions

Billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson was this year the target of a $US5 million ($6.37 million) scam, in a ploy that reveals the lengths some scammers are prepared to go to. Branson has related details of the scam via a blog post, saying that six months ago, his assistant received a written request โ€œon what appeared […]
Martin Kovacs
Martin Kovacs
Richard Branson

Billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson was this year the target of a $US5 million ($6.37 million) scam, in a ploy that reveals the lengths some scammers are prepared to go to.

Branson has related details of the scam via a blog post, saying that six months ago, his assistant received a written request โ€œon what appeared to be official government notepaperโ€ asking for Branson to contact UK Secretary of State for Defence Sir Michael Fallon.

โ€œI called Sir Michael on the number given,โ€ Branson says.

โ€œHe told me it was an incredibly sensitive matter and that he wanted to be sure there was nobody else in the room whilst I talked to him. He asked that we speak in strict confidence and said that a British diplomat had been kidnapped and was being held by terrorists.โ€

The person Branson spoke to then explained that while British laws prevent the government from paying out ransoms, โ€œthere was a particular, very sensitive, reason why they had to get this diplomat backโ€, and this had led to a syndicate of British businesspersons being confidentially asked to step in. For his part, Branson was being asked to part with $US5 million.

Aware of the potential for being scammed, Branson says he explained to this person that he would need to follow up and confirm the details.

โ€œHe said he fully understood and that I should send one of my senior team over to his department at Whitehall to have a quiet word with his secretary,โ€ Branson writes.

โ€œHe said that she was the only other person who knew about it and that if we said the code word โ€˜Davenportโ€™, she would affirm it was for real.โ€

But Branson says when he then sought to get in touch with Fallon, whose secretary assured him that it wasn’t actually Fallon he had spoken to.

โ€œIt was clearly a scam,โ€ Branson writes.

โ€œI told them what had happened and we passed the matter over to the police.โ€

Loan scam โ€œa heist of enormous scaleโ€

Branson has also revealed that a friend of his was the victim of a US$2 million scam in which a scammer impersonated Branson.

In the aftermath of Hurricane Irma, the scammer had contacted the unnamed businessperson, claiming to be Branson’s assistant and requesting a call be made to Branson.

Branson says โ€œthe conman did an extremely accurate impression of meโ€, spinning a lie about how he was trying to mobilise aid in the British Virgin Islands and urgently needed a loan.

โ€œThey claimed I couldnโ€™t get hold of my bank in the UK because I didnโ€™t have any communications going to Europe and Iโ€™d only just managed to make a satellite call to the businessman in America,โ€ Branson writes.

โ€œThe businessperson, incredibly graciously, gave $2 million, which promptly disappeared.โ€

Branson says that, speaking to his friend and having convinced him of his identity by providing details of their last get-together, they โ€œquickly realised he had been duped out of his money by a criminal pretending to be meโ€.

Describing it as โ€œa heist of enormous scaleโ€, Branson says he feels โ€œit is likely to be the same person who tried to con me earlier this yearโ€.

โ€œThere has been a big rise in fake ad scams online recently, and Iโ€™d urge everyone to look out for them and report any you see,โ€ he writes.

โ€œItโ€™s not just online it can happen โ€“ it could be on the phone or even in person.โ€

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