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United KingdomCrime2 days ago

Moment cowboy traders are caught fleecing frail woman, 83, out of £18,000 by posing as workmen to fix her roof

Two men, Charlie Lee and James Cunningham, were caught on covert camera scamming an 83-year-old woman named Christine out of £18,000 by pretending to be roof repair workers. Over five months, they defrauded her of over £30,000. The pair only performed minimal repairs on her roof before being exposed by hidden camera footage. Cunningham encouraged Christine to approve the payment and warned her to keep the transaction secret. During a police investigation, it was found that the pair had swindled £880,000 from 11 victims over nearly two years. Cunningham was sentenced to five years and ten month

According to Monzo, scams are also becoming more frequent with the use of AI, especially when it comes to ticket sales

13:22, 19 Jun 2026 Updated 13:28, 19 Jun 2026

Online scams represent a massive crisis in the UK, with criminals stealing more than £1.3 billion every year. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimates that over four million incidents of fraud occur each year, with up to 87% of all scams originating online or via the phone.

The technology has become so terrifyingly accurate that even financial professionals are falling victim.

Chazzy Wood, a 42-year-old finance worker from London, who handles fraud cases daily, was conned out of £300 while trying to sell a jacket on Vinted. After an interested buyer bought it, she received an email which she thought was from Vinted, claiming she needed to verify her bank details to release the payment.

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"The email said if I didn't confirm my details I wouldn't receive the payment, so I clicked the link in the email and started inputting my details," Chazzy told the Mirror .

"I I could tell the wording sounded like it was generated by AI such as Claude or ChatGPT but I went ahead with it as I know a lot of places are using AI more these days.

"It asked me for my bank details, card number, expiry date but it was through a platform that cloned Truelayer, an open banking platform I am aware of through my job. I had no reason not to believe it as it's one of the vendors a lot of financial institutions use for banking."

As soon as she entered her details, £300 was taken from her account. While she managed to claw back £200 from her bank, the experience has left her shaken.

She said she'll never click an external email link again, and has urged people to only ever provide details through strict in-app channels.

She said: "I just thought there is no way a scammer is using open banking platforms that banking professionals use, which makes me think it's AI. I was so shocked, it all happened so quickly. I know that everyone uses chatbots these days and AI to support services but I just couldn't believe it. It's annoying how clever these scams are."

It comes as new research from Monzo shows ticket fraud is a growing epidemic. Nearly one in three ticket scam victims only discover they have been defrauded when they reach the venue gates, after spending up to £1,295 on travel, hotels, outfits, childcare and time off work.

As the UK enters a massive summer of music with Harry Styles taking over Wembley for 12 nights and Olivia Dean headlining at the O2, Tom Stead's story serves as a stark warning.

After being burned by a ticket scam once before, Tom thought it would never happen to him again. Sadly, the 35-year-old was proven wrong earlier this year, falling victim to a highly sophisticated fraud that left him £720 out of pocket for Taylor Swift tickets.

Tom's first encounter with scammers happened at a Kylie Minogue concert, where his premium tickets turned out to be fake.

"When we arrived, the venue staff told us the tickets simply didn't exist," Tom said. "We ended up having to downgrade to standard entry just to get in because we couldn't prove we’d paid for the premium experience, causing another financial hit. To be turned away from the venue was devastating.

"You look forward to seeing your favourite artist for months and often put effort into additional purchases that come with it such as new outfits, hotels, planning transport - so to have our tickets rejected at the door created an additional impact beyond the cost of the ticket itself."

Hoping for a better experience earlier this year, Tom forked out £720 via bank transfer for six Taylor Swift tickets.

This time, he thought he safe as he hadn't just relied on a random social media listing, and was put in touch with the seller by a trusted acquaintance who had bought tickets from them before.

It turned out that Tom had actually purchased tickets from them for a show in 2024, so he had zero concerns. Ahead of the event, the seller regularly messaged via WhatsApp and email with face-value offers for upcoming concers and sports events, and asked them to spread the word to friends.

But as the concert date approached, red flags started to appear. "I was constantly chasing the seller for weeks, and they kept making excuses," Tom said. "Then, the day before the show, she completely fell silent. The tickets never arrived."

Because the scammer dragged out the ruse until the last-minute, Tom and his friends missed the free cancellation window for their accommodation. So while his bank eventually refunded the tickets, the hotel money was gone forever.

Tom said: "It was incredibly upsetting and stressful. Because I arranged the trip for myself and my friends, I felt an overwhelming sense of responsibility. We all work hard for our money, and watching it vanish was devastating.

According to the new study by Monzo, scams are also becoming more frequ…

Read the full article at Daily Mirror
Source document: Office for National Statistics (ONS)

4 reports

Daily MirrorParty-alignedCenter2 days ago
'I handle fraud cases daily, but this terrifyingly clever AI scam still robbed me'

A finance professional in London fell victim to an AI-generated scam while selling an item on Vinted. The scammer sent an email impersonating Vinted, asking for bank details under the pretense of verifying payment. The victim noticed the email appeared to be generated by AI but proceeded due to familiarity with AI usage in various platforms. The incident highlights growing concerns around AI-facilitated fraud in the UK.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual account of a personal experience with AI-related fraud without overt ideological framing. It cites statistical data from the Office for National Statistics and references a specific individual's encounter, maintaining neutrality.

Official sources cited

  • government Office for National Statistics (ONS)
BBC News (UK)State / PublicCenter2 days ago
Traitors star says he lost life savings to a scam

Sam Little, a former contestant on the BBC show 'The Traitors,' has spoken out about losing £40,000 in a phishing scam. He claims he was tricked by messages appearing to come from his bank, leading him to access a compromised website. He lost all his funds in cryptocurrency, which he had saved for starting a family. He now warns others about the ease of falling victim to such scams.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a personal experience with a phishing scam without taking a stance on the issue. It presents the facts as described by Sam Little and does not include commentary or framing that suggests a particular ideological perspective.

Daily MailIndependentCenter5 days ago
Moment cowboy traders are caught fleecing frail woman, 83, out of £18,000 by posing as workmen to fix her roof

Two men, Charlie Lee and James Cunningham, were caught on covert camera scamming an 83-year-old woman named Christine out of £18,000 by pretending to be roof repair workers. Over five months, they defrauded her of over £30,000. The pair only performed minimal repairs on her roof before being exposed by hidden camera footage. Cunningham encouraged Christine to approve the payment and warned her to keep the transaction secret. During a police investigation, it was found that the pair had swindled £880,000 from 11 victims over nearly two years. Cunningham was sentenced to five years and ten month

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a criminal case involving fraud and exploitation without taking a stance on political issues. It presents facts from the incident, including quotes from the victim and details of the legal consequences faced by the perpetrators.

Official sources cited

  • other Victim Impact Statement
The Guardian (UK)IndependentCenter9 days ago
Fraudster jailed after scamming London renters out of £77,000

A man named Frederic Priestley was sentenced to jail after scamming over 30 London renters out of more than £77,000 by falsely advertising properties for rent on Facebook.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a criminal case without taking a stance or using biased language. It presents factual information about the crime and the legal consequences faced by the individual involved.

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentOffice for National Statistics (ONS)
  • otherVictim Impact Statement