Fake invoicing

The Herald reports:

Six people have been arrested over a $1.6 million invoice scam which involved the sale of advertising in magazines that did not exist or were not as widely circulated as claimed.

The arrests follow a five-month operation involving more than 60 staff from multiple agencies – the first of its kind to crack down on invoice scams in .

Police arrested six people in Auckland, Port and after search warrants were executed at more than 25 locations throughout the country.

All are facing charges of participating in an organised criminal group, while five are also facing fraud charges.

The Serious Fraud Office () alleges the group sold advertising in magazines that did not exist or had “grossly exaggerated” circulation figures.

The magazines had general titles that suggested links with worthy causes like road safety, parenting or drug addiction.

The SFO alleges the invoice scam generated up to $1.6m since 2008.

These sort of scams have been going on for decades. They're sort of cunning. They rely on the fact that large companies will just pay a $250 bill without bothering to trace down which ad appeared and who authorised it.
Small companies will go back and say they didn't place an ad, be told it was a mistake, and generally not worth their time to follow up and expose it as a scam, if they even realise it is.

Acting SFO chief executive Simon McArley said high-volume, low-value fraud was particularly difficult to address.

But the operation was completed in a relatively short timeframe because of the multi-agency approach.

“The agencies were able to each contribute specialist skills and achieve a result that none working alone would have been able to,” Mr McArley said.

“Invoicing scams cost New Zealand businesses hundreds of thousands of dollars a year and small businesses and charities are often the target.

Will be interesting to see the names of the accused.

Comments (7)

Login to comment or vote

Add a Comment