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South Boston man charged as courier in computer-popup scheme that took an elderly man for $420,000

A South Boston man was arrested this week on a federal wire-fraud conspiracy charge for his alleged role in a scam ring that took a 75-year-old North Adams man for $420,000 after he responded to a popup message that his computer was frozen.

According to an affidavit by an FBI agent on the case, Urvishkumar Vipulkumar Patel, 21, acted as one of several couriers for an as yet uncharged ring leader in the scheme - the one unlucky enough to be sent out to collect a payment when the FBI closed in.

The affidavit details how the victim was snared:

In or around June 2024, Victim 1 received a pop-up message on his computer claiming that his computer was frozen. The message contained a phone number, which Victim 1 believed to be associated with Microsoft, for Victim 1 to call for assistance.

Victim 1 called the number listed on the pop-up and spoke with an individual who claimed to be trying to fix the problem. That individual then told Victim 1 that he could not fix the problem and had to transfer him to someone else.

Victim 1 was transferred to an individual who called himself Sam WILSON. WILSON told Victim 1 that he was a federal agent with the U.S. Treasury Department. WILSON told Victim 1 that he would take a look at the issue with Victim 1's computer. WILSON then purported to confirm Victim 1's name and address; when Victim 1 stated that was not the correct address, WILSON provided additional addresses until Victim 1 identified his correct address.

WILSON then told Victim 1 that based on Victim 1's confirming his name and address, WILSON could see that Victim 1's name and address was listed as being involved in a money laundering scheme. WILSON told Victim 1 that the "Treasury" showed that a number of houses had been purchased in Victim 1's name in both the United States and Russia.

WILSON told Victim 1 that he was going to help him get out of this trouble. He told Victim 1 that he would be talking to a judge, but that in the meantime, Victim 1 needed to safeguard his money from being further implicated in the supposed money laundering scheme. Specifically, WILSON told Victim 1 that he should withdraw cash from his bank and send it to the Treasury Department to be kept in a lock box until Victim 1 could be cleared of the scheme. WILSON cautioned Victim 1 that his bank would not let Victim 1 withdraw all of his money at once, so he should withdraw smaller amounts and send it to WILSON at Treasury in installments.

Victim 1 then began to withdraw the contents of his bank accounts and send the money to WILSON as directed. Specifically, from in or around June 2024 through in or around September 2024, Victim 1 provided money to several individuals he believed to be associated with WILSON on approximately five separate occasions.

Before each pickup, "Wilson" asked the victim how much he could take out from his bank and, after he did so, instructed him "to place the cash in a box, tape the box, and to write his name and address on the box." He would then go outside and hand it to a courier, who would provide the PIN "Wilson" and the victim had agreed to beforehand.

Over three months, the victim gave a total of $420,000 in cash to the couriers, the affidavit continues.

On Oct. 1, the victim's sister, realizing this was nuts, contacted the FBI, who spoke to the victim, convinced him he was being scammed and got him to make one final call to "Wilson," to claim he had another $33,000 to hand over. They arranged a pickup on Monday, around 12:30 p.m. An FBI agent walked up to a car waiting outside the victim's house, with a box containing counterfeit bills.

The undercover, posing as Victim 1, asked PATEL if this payment would finally clear Victim 1, and PATEL answered yes.

The undercover agent then placed the box into PATEL's vehicle and PATEL quickly drove away.

Agents conducted a traffic stop of PATEL. PATEL was driving a rental car, which in my training and experience is a common tactic used by individuals who are trying to avoid detection. He had an active WhatsApp call on his cell phone at the time he was pulled over.

After providing him his Miranda warnings, PATEL initially told agents that he was being blackmailed to collect the packages. He later said he had been collecting packages for weeks at the direction of another. He stated that he was paid for collecting the packages. Specifically, he told agents that he would be given an address and a description of an individual who was to bring out a package. He also was given a PIN passcode to provide to the individual. He was given a meet location to drive to after obtaining the package. At the meet location, PATEL either provided the package to a person who paid him his cut or he left the package in a drop box and drove to another address to receive his payment.

PATEL told agents that he opened the first package he received and saw that it contained cash. He stated that he believed his activity was not lawful but continued to collect packages.

Patel was held without bail until a hearing in Springfield federal court yesterday, after which a judge released him on personal recognizance, on conditions he not leave Massachusetts while his case is pending and that he tell members of his family he's now facing a fraud conspiracy charge, according to court records.

Innocent, etc.

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Comments

Wow this is kind of surprising. I was under the impression most of this stuff was done overseas, not in the US. Let alone right here in our state.

Dumb Dumb Dumb to do it inside the US.

And for folks who are not tech savvy reading this post, take it from a 29 year+ IT person... Microsoft does not offer support. Well for the most part. There are some paid options, such companies who have licensing agreements with Microsoft, often pay for a block of support cases for crazy amounts of money. But this is often done via third parties, not Microsoft directly.

But generally, for end users (home users), there is no support from Microsoft directly. If you have an issue with your computer or it's operating system, you call the manufacturer of your computer. (i.e. Dell, HP, etc). The "OEM" licensing agreement Microsoft and hardware makers says that the hardware maker (i.e. Dell) is to provide support for Windows, not Microsoft.

Microsoft also does not have any way into your computer to even know you have a virus or something wrong with it. And furthermore, they will never ask you to contact them, yadda yadda. Again, because Microsoft does not offer support to end users.

Annnnnd... In my long career, the few times I have seen any errors that said "contact support", not only did they say "Contact your hardware manufacturer" specifically (and not Microsoft), but typically happened as "blue screen of deaths" (example) or in the event log of the computer. Not big full screen in yellow stating in caps 'YOU HAVE A VIRUS CONTACT MICROSOFT SUPPORT. CLICK HERE" while you were browsing the internet. It just doesn't happen like that.

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Voting closed 38

for this kind of operation that routes through physical cash.

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Voting closed 29

The first time I heard of this particular scam I was not expecting these stats:

Younger adults — Gen Z, millennials, and Gen X — are 34 percent more likely to report losing money to fraud compared with those over 60, according to a recent report from the Federal Trade Commission. Another study found that well-educated people or those with good jobs were just as vulnerable to scams as everyone else.

I've been working IT for over 25 years and there are always new social engineering scams being developed, along with many new variations of old scams. See the FTC.gov site (real link, scout's honor) for How To Spot, Avoid, and Report Tech Support Scams

Tech support scammers almost got my mother to give them remote control access while logged onto her bank account and she's "not the type to fall for a scam". I think the only thing that saved her was she was on a Chromebook that wouldn't run the software they had her download. Their fallback position was to have her withdraw cash from the bank and then use it to buy crypto at a Bitcoin ATM. They were working her for a while before she had enough and said she'd call them back tomorrow. She came to her senses once she was off the phone and no longer under their influence.

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Voting closed 21

Yeah, I got tired of my dad calling me because he got some sort of virus or something on his Windows PC, that I bought him a Mac notebook. I told him to only do his banking and bill paying on his Mac and not his PC. (tbh I think he hasn't used his PC in ages... since getting the Mac)

That seemed to work. (I hope). Now his iPhone woes on the other hand. ugh. I've never heard of someone getting a virus or something on their iphone but my dad managed to do that. Said it came from some ad on Walmart.com .

That's what angers me about these scammers, they are buying ads via Google ads and the like, and the ad runs on legit sites. (ask me someday about why I don't leave the ad blocker off on Uhub.. cuz I got served with those ads here!!). You don't suspect that you're going to get a full screen "VIRUS WARNING" 'ad' from some website you go to regularly. I can see why lots of people fall for it.. its not like grandma was looking at porn or some fringe website.

It happens everywhere too. Remember when Boston.com gave people a virus several years ago?

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Voting closed 31

Just take Windows off your PC and put Linux on it.

I get very few of those virus popups, and, when I do, I can say "ha ha scammer, I'm running Linux, I don't have to reinstall a Windows driver".

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Voting closed 19

This whole situation could have been avoided by buying a Mac!

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Voting closed 22

Any time you get an odd warning message, people’s first reaction should be to close the web browser (e.g. Edge, Safari, Chrome, Firefox) using Task Manager or Force Quit.

Don’t call any numbers, don’t bother trying to click the potentially bogus “close” button - just kill the process. 9 times out of 10 the message is a lie.

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Voting closed 17

In my experience it's always a lie. Good advice though, from an anon ( you should get a username). To get to the Task Manager on a Windows PC hold down the Ctrl, Alt, and Delete buttons at the same time once then choose Task Manager from the list presented.

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Voting closed 16