Equipment purchase scam using the name Mark Williams
Description of Potential Fraud:
Five Ontario firms have notified us that they received an email from the purported Mark Williams looking to retain them with regards to making a large commercial purchase. This appears to be a bad cheque scam (with a real company likely being impersonated) that presents as legal matter requiring the assistance of a lawyer. In this scam lawyers will be duped into wiring real funds from their trust accounts after depositing a fake cheque received as payment from the purchaser (who is part of the fraud).
See our Confirmed Fraud Page for more of an explanation of how these frauds work and to see other names associated with it. Our Fraud Fact Sheet lists the red flags of a bogus legal matter that is really a fraud.
Here is response lawyers receive after replying to the the initial contact email :
From: Mark Williams [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, January 4, 2018 3:05 PM
Subject: RE: Re: re: Escrow Services
Hello ,
I am purchasing a used excavator and the purchase agreement requires escrow services.
I will scan and email the purchase agreement documents to you for your review in other to enable you to have a better understanding of what is required from you, the location of the parties involved and all details of the purchase are outlined in the purchase sales agreement documents.
Acknowledge this message and let me know if it is okay for me to forward the purchase sales agreement and escrow instruction to you for your review.
Awaiting your response.
Regards,
Mark Williams
21695 South Main St
How to Handle a Real or Suspected Fraud
If you have been targeted by any of these frauds, please forward any of the emails and supporting documents that you have received to [email protected]. We use this information for the warnings we post on AvoidAClaim. We do not disclose the names of firms that have provided us with information.
Ontario Lawyers - Call LAWPRO
If you are an Ontario lawyer acting on a matter that you suspect might be a fraud, call LAWPRO at 1-800-410-1013 (416-598-5899). One of our Fraud Team members will talk you through the common fraud scenarios we are seeing and help you spot red flags that may indicate you are being duped. This will help you ask appropriate questions of your client to determine if the matter is legitimate or not. If the matter you are acting on turns out to be a fraud, we will work with you to prevent the fraud and minimize potential claims costs.
What can you do to help put a stop to the fraud attempt?
You can simply stop replying to the fraudster’s emails or inform them that you suspect fraud and will not act on the matter. You can report the fraudsters’ email addresses to the email hosting company. If you have a fraudulent cheque you can destroy it or send it to the fraud department of the financial institution it is drawn upon. In Canada, you can report the fraud to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre.
We are often asked if it is worthwhile to report the fraud attempt to the police in the hopes of helping catch the fraudsters. You can certainly report the fraud to your local or federal law enforcement agencies, but unfortunately it is often difficult, expensive and time consuming for them to attempt to shut down these online fraud perpetrators (though there are some successes).
What if the fraud has been successful?
If you have been successfully duped, please immediately notify LAWPRO as there may be a claim against you. See the LAWPRO website for instructions on how to report a claim.
For more immediate updates on fraud and claims prevention, subscribe to the email or RSS feed updates from LAWPRO’s AvoidAClaim blog.
Fraud Fact Sheet
More fraud prevention information and resources are available on the practicePRO Fraud page, including the Fraud Fact Sheet, a handy reference for lawyers and law firm staff that describes the common frauds and the red flags that can help identify them. To proactively prevent trust account shortfalls and malpractice claims, LAWPRO encourages firms to teach their lawyers and staff about fraud and how to recognize fraud attempts.
April 06, 2018 at 9:00 pm, Hitoshi Oishi said:
Thank you for sharing this information.
I am an immigration lawyer and solicitor in Osaka, Japan.
Yesterday, I received a email like this.
I am purchasing a used excavator and a property in your state and the purchase agreement requires escrow services, I want to know if you can provide closing and escrow service for this purchase.
Let me know if this is within your service capacity and I can email a copy of the purchase invoice, escrow instruction and purchase agreement to you for your review, if you cannot provide closing and escrow service for this purchase I will appreciate your effort if you can recommend who can.
Thank you while I await your response,
Mark Williams
21695 South Main St
Medimont, ID 83842
In Japan, usually, when buying real estate, first, realtors ask help for our legal service to do real estate transactons and registration.
So, I felt a bit skeptical about this email.
I found this website.
Thank you.
January 09, 2019 at 2:48 pm, Karen said:
I also received this today in Ontario, California.
From: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, January 9, 2019 9:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: New Client
Hello,
I am in need of escrow services with regards a purchase agreement for a used excavator in your state. Kindly confirm if you or your firm can provide closing and escrow service for this purchase. If the aforementioned is within your scope of practice, upon confirmation via return email, i will send to you a copy of the purchase invoice, escrow instruction as well as the purchase agreement for your perusal, if not, a referral will be greatly appreciated.
I await your timely response at your earliest convenience.
January 27, 2019 at 6:31 pm, andrews said:
Received here on 09-Jan-2019 also. But this is far from unusual. Essentially the scam presents with different names:
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
* [email protected]
Not that these are all within the past few months, but it gives you an idea of the enthusiasm with which the trust account scam (fake check scam) is offered.