Site icon Sophos News

Feds shut down bogus COVID-19 vaccine site

A free coronavirus vaccine from the World Health Organization (WHO), for only $4.95 to cover shipping costs?!?
Nah, we didn’t think so, either. On Sunday, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that it shut down what it called a wire fraud scheme being carried out by the operators of a site in order to squeeze profit from the confusion and widespread fear surrounding COVID-19 – by promising to ship coronavirus vaccine kits that don’t actually exist.
Let us state the obvious, or, rather, quote the DOJ’s statement as it states the obvious:

There are currently no legitimate COVID-19 vaccines and the WHO is not distributing any such vaccine.

The site – now offline but available as an exhibit attached to the DOJ’s civil complaint – was offering consumers access to WHO vaccine kits in exchange for a shipping charge of $4.95, which consumers would pay by entering their credit card information on the website.
Per DOJ request, US District Judge Robert Pitman issued a temporary restraining order requiring that the registrar of the scam site – listed as NameCheap in its Whois Record – immediately take action to block public access to it.
The DOJ says that this is its first enforcement action taken against COVID-19 fraud. Dollars to donuts says it won’t be the last, given that we’ve seen plenty of cyberscum trying to make money off of people’s misery and uncertainty.

Coronavirus-themed cybercrime

We’ve seen:

The DOJ says it’s still investigating the site, coronavirusmedicalkit.com. As of Sunday, investigators didn’t know who its operators are. The tech contact for the site is listed on the WhoIs registry as WhoIsGuard Protected, with an address in Panama and an IP address coming out of Lansing, Michigan, though who knows where its server is really hosted. It’s easy to obscure an IP address location through techniques such as using a virtual private network or Tor, for example.

What to do

The DOJ has the following slew of precautionary measures to take in order to keep from getting snared in any of the emerging COVID-19 scams. If they sound exactly like the general tips for staying safe online that we pass out all the time, that’s for a good reason: the crooks are always out there trying to scam us, and the pandemic is the most recent attention grabber that they’re hoping to use to exploit us, catching us when we’re feeling panicky and unsure of what to do.
Do what you normally do to stay safe online, in other words. Just beware that there’s a new angle the crooks are trying to leverage to get your attention, your financial details, your personally identifiable information (PII) and whatever else they can swipe. To say safe, make sure to take these steps:

For the most up-to-date information on COVID-19, visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and WHO websites.
The DOJ is urging people in the US to report suspected fraud schemes related to COVID-19 by calling the National Center for Disaster Fraud (NCDF) hotline (1-866-720-5721) or by emailing the NCDF at disaster@leo.gov.
In the UK, contact Action Fraud. Also, bear in mind that the UK has seen a motley collection of pandemic-related scams, including sales of hand sanitizer containing an ingredient banned for human use years ago. They were being sold for £5 a bottle, according to trading standards officers in Birmingham.
Stay safe, wash your hands for 20 seconds a pop, and good luck avoiding the crooks!


Latest Naked Security podcast

LISTEN NOW

Click-and-drag on the soundwaves below to skip to any point in the podcast. You can also listen directly on Soundcloud.

Exit mobile version