'I'm still in shock': Brampton, Ont. landlord caught in e-transfer interception fraud
A Brampton, Ont. landlord says he's shocked after two e-transfers he was meant to receive were blocked from his account by scammers.
"I'm still in shock," Jai Walia, of Brampton, told CTV News Toronto. Walia is a landlord of two units, and he asks his tenants to pay their rent using e-transfers.
In September, Walia was expecting two rent payments of $2,000 and $2,500. Even though the tenants sent him money, Walia said he never received their payment in his bank account.
Walia found out his email account had been hacked and he was the victim of a scam called Interac e-transfer interception fraud.
Walia said he does not use autodeposit and instead uses security questions. It appears criminals used his email to open up a bank account and set up autodeposit, so any money sent to Walia would automatically go into the scammers' account instead.
"How can one single email be used by two single individuals, which have no connections at all," said Walia. "I feel scared what if this happens again by other means."
Nick Biasini, cybersecurity expert with Cisco Talos, said it is equally important to protect your email address as it is to protect passwords for bank accounts and credit cards.
"Don't discount the importance of your email," said Biasini, who added that a fraudster can see any service an individual has signed up for once they hack into an email address account.
"If your adversary is in your email inbox, it makes it very easy for them to start resetting every password that you have and they will be the ones getting those reset links," said Biasini.
To prevent Interac e-transfer fraud, turn on autodeposit, which Interac says is secure and convenient. Autodeposit helps protect against e-mail fraud, it verifies transactions are sent to the intended recipient and the money is automatically deposited without security questions.
In the end, one of Walia’s tenants got their money back and paid the rent, but the other remains scammed out of $2,000.
Walia has since has changed his account to autodeposit to prevent this from happening again.
"I feel sorry for anyone out there who is getting scammed because of these culprits," said Walia.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
N.Y. prosecutors charge Luigi Mangione with murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO, court records show
Late Monday, Manhattan prosecutors filed murder and other charges against Luigi Nicholas Mangione in the killing of UnitedHealthcare's CEO, according to an online court docket.
Union dropped wage demand to 19% over four years in Canada Post negotiations: CUPW
The Canadian Union of Postal Workers has reportedly dropped its wage demand to 19 per cent over four years, CUPW negotiator Jim Gallant told CTV News.
Taxpayer-funded Eras Tour tickets returned by federal minister
While tens of thousands of fans packed Vancouver's BC Place for the last shows of Taylor Swift's Eras Tour this weekend, a federal cabinet minister wasn't one of them.
Alan Young, lawyer and scholar known for landmark legal challenges, dies at age 69
York University says Alan Young, a lawyer and legal scholar known for leading the challenge of Canada's prostitution laws before the country's top court, has died at age 69.
What the upcoming holiday GST relief will mean for consumers
The federal government's GST break will arrive this Saturday, just in time for the last stretch of holiday shopping.
Canada Post strike on day 26 as union sends new proposals
With the Canada Post strike nearing four weeks, the postal service says it doesn't see an end in sight.
'Looking for the Weinstein of Quebec': impresario Gilbert Rozon's civil trial begins
Just for Laughs founder Gilbert Rozon's civil trial for sexual assault opened Monday at the Montreal courthouse with his lawyer portraying him as the scapegoat in a hunt to find Quebec's Harvey Weinstein.
AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton to receive Nobel Prize in physics today
British Canadian computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton and co-laureate John Hopfield are set to receive their Nobel Prize for physics at a ceremony in Stockholm today.
Israel's Netanyahu takes the stand in long-running corruption trial
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took the stand on Tuesday in his long-running trial for alleged corruption, setting off what's expected to be a weeks-long spectacle that will draw unwelcome attention to his legal woes as he faces an international arrest warrant for war crimes and the fighting in Gaza continues.