The Latest Scam Involves the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA)
Tuesday, August 25th, 2009
The next time that the Canada Revenue Agency contacts you, don’t be too quick to give out any information. A good number of people are being scammed by what they believe is the CRA. This is how the scam works. You receive a telephone call, letter, or email from what appears to be the CRA asking for personal information – social insurance number, credit card info, bank info, or passport number. This is a copy of the fraudulent letter being circulated. It all seems to be legitimate and because we trust and or fear the Canada Revenue Agency we are all too quick to provide what ever information they are asking for. The problem is that the CRA hasn’t asked for the info and you’ve just been scammed.
The CRA will never ask for your social insurance number in an insecure way.
The CRA does not have people’s email addresses.
What can you do?
- NEVER provide personal information.
- Unsolicited e-mails claiming to be sent from the CRA should be deleted immediately.
- Do not follow any links listed in the e-mails claiming to be sent from the CRA as these websites contain harmful software.
- If you have an accountant, contact him/her before you take any action.
- Contact Phonebusters immediately.
This is not the first time that scam artists have pretended to be from the CRA. In fact this is the third year in a row where there has been a similar scam. In 2007 there was an email scam where what appeared to be a request from the CRA asked for personal financial information and directed people to phony websites. In 2008 documents were sent out from what appeared to be the CRA saying that there was insufficient information regarding tax returns, with instructions to fill out an enclosed form with personal financial data and return it by mail. Beware of communications from the CRA.
