A Melbourne woman has been sentenced for her involvement in a crime syndicate which stole millions from superannuation and share trading accounts.
The amount stolen through the scheme, which used fraud and identity theft, was estimated to be in excess of $3.3 million and attempts were made to steal a further $7.5 million. The group also laundered $2.5 million through luxury goods in Hong Kong.
On 26 November 2021, the 24-year-old woman pleaded guilty to the following three offences:
She was sentenced to five years and six months imprisonment with a four year non-parole period.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) and Australian Federal Police (AFP) first began the investigation, codenamed Operation Birks, as part of the Serious Financial Crime Taskforce in late 2018.
It found she worked with others to create a cloned website that mimicked the legitimate website of a super fund, using a domain name that was almost identical to the legitimate site. Online advertisements were used to promote the cloned website to bring it the top of the search engine. The intention was to harvest members’ usernames and passwords when they visited the cloned website
The syndicate then withdrew the super savings of victims and deposited them in the fraudulent bank accounts. The stolen funds were laundered by sending them to an overseas contact, who used the funds to purchase untraceable assets such as jewellery and luxury brand items in Hong Kong. These were then sold and the money remitted to the offender in Australia through cryptocurrencies.
ASIC deputy chair, Sarah Court, said: “Data breaches within Australia’s financial system are significant threats, with consequences that can affect people’s savings for retirement. Driving good cyber-risk and operational resilience practices in financial services and markets is a continuing priority for ASIC. Where appropriate, we will act to address digitally-enabled misconduct, including scams. We encourage all entities to be cyber vigilant and act quickly to protect consumers.”
“As the conduct regulator for superannuation, ASIC is particularly concerned at the sophistication and complexity of the crimes to defraud people of their super. We encourage Australians to check their super balance and change their passwords regularly, as one way to protect their superannuation from fraud."
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