Sunday, September 8, 2024

‘This is crazy’: Lee didn’t know $180,000 of his super had been stolen until he received a letter

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Lee Braz was well into his 50s and knew he had to sort out his super.

Then he received a call from a Sydney company promising to help him do just that.

But the call was the start of a nightmare that would see Lee’s entire super balance, about $180,000, stolen.

Before going ahead, Lee checked the company’s website and saw it was properly registered in Australia.

In sales documents it claimed to have impressive returns using money from self-managed super funds to invest in tech and finance giants like Google and Visa.

Lee sent over his passport to open an account. He wanted to invest $10,000 first to see how it performed.

But scammers used the documents he’d provided to fraudulently take the lot.

Lee’s signature was forged to rollover his super into the scammers’ account.(ABC News: Mark Leonardi)

His fund, Intrust Super, failed to notice anything suspicious with the dodgy rollover form.

Intrust is now owned by Hostplus which manages $110 billion for 1.8 million people.

It wasn’t until Lee opened a letter from his super fund that he realised anything was wrong.

“[It said] as per your wishes, we’ve transferred your entire super balance. I just went, ‘What’s going on here? This is crazy’.”

‘One call could have stopped it’

When Lee saw the rollover forms, he could tell straight away there were several issues.

“That’s definitely not my signature, I smell a rat,” he said.

The document, with a forged signature, used to trick Lee Braz' super fund to rollover his life savings to scammers.

This document, with Lee’s forged signature, was used to trick Intrust Super.(ABC News: Mark Leonardi)

It wasn’t just the fake signature, there was a dubious printout of a bank account when it was meant to be a proper statement.

The printout was certified by an accountant in Sydney, but Lee lived on the Gold Coast, and accountants aren’t allowed to certify documents.

His fund didn’t have multi-factor authentication in place — so he never received an alert by text message or email.

“One phone call or one SMS could have stopped it,” he said.

A document from Lee Braz' case which was used to rollover his super to scammers.

A document given to Lee’s super fund, signed by an “accountant”.(ABC News: Mark Leonardi)

A sales script to screw Aussies out of their super

A call centre in the Philippines allegedly played a crucial role in the theft of Lee’s funds and is at the centre of a number of fraudulent super schemes. 

In Lee’s scheme, known as SMSF Advisory Services, a total of 16 people were fleeced out of about $4.8 million.

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In 2022, it was raided by authorities along with a private residence and the ABC’s cameras were there.

Among the evidence uncovered was a call script for targeting Australians.

  • “Aussies … are relaxed people but still like a layer of professionalism.”
  • “No swearing … even if the client is swearing off his head.”
  • A heading said: “You’re NOT selling them your [sic] helping them”.
  • “When a client joins our firm they might start with $10k or a million dollars.”

Australian cyber-crime investigator Ken Gamble observed the raids in Manila after victims paid him to look into what happened.

“These were very cleverly prepared scripts … to explain all the so-called legitimate services that this fraudulent organisation was actually carrying out,” Mr Gamble said.

A man wearing a black shirt and black cap stands in an office.

Cyber-crime investigator Ken Gamble.(Supplied)

While no charges have been laid in the Philippines, a criminal prosecution is underway in Australia of a man with direct links to the call centre.

Larry John Dawson, 67, is awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to money laundering in the NSW District Court.

Dawson admitted to setting up an Australian company, PW Kitt Co, as cover to launder the stolen money into cryptocurrency.

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