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Scammers make Ksh14M in a month and then splash it on designer shoes

05:04 PM
Scammers make Ksh14M in a month and then splash it on designer shoes

They don’t keep money; they spend it here and now.

Paul Curtis is showing us around an evidence room piled high with designer shoes and handbags. Thousands of items are neatly stacked in plastic containers on wooden shelves.

The items here have been seized from financial fraudsters, some of whom send scam texts – known as smishing – to victims.

“They like to live a lavish lifestyle,” says Curtis. “We have got somewhere between 8,500 and 10,000 items of evidence in this one room,” he says, the result of house searches and raids carried out by officers.

The smell of fresh leather goods pervades the air. Brightly coloured Gucci stilettos catch the eye from a distance; it’s a treasure trove of top-label kit worth tens of thousands of shillings.

These purchases are an indication of how much cash they’re making from their crimes and what they’re spending it on.

The term “smishing” is a combination of “SMS”, or “short message service” – the technology behind text messages – and “phishing”.

Fraudsters send fake text messages – apparently from a bank or other trusted company – to trick people into disclosing personal information such as passwords and PINs. The intention is to defraud them out of their money.

Curtis is part of the Dedicated Card and Payment Crime Unit – a team made up of officers from the City of London Police and the Metropolitan Police Service.

A designer bag and a shoe displayed for visual reference.PHOTO/pexels

Although they’re London police forces, the unit has a national remit and is sponsored by the banking industry. It focuses on combating financial fraud.

“In a recent smishing case of ours, the defendant was sentenced based on sending 15,000 messages in five days. That equated to making about Ksh 14.9 million a month,” he says.

The senior officer was referring to Ruichen Xiong, a student from China who was convicted of the crime after driving around London in March of this year, sending messages to tens of thousands of potential victims.

Xiong was sentenced in June at Inner London Crown Court to 58 weeks in prison after pleading guilty to fraud by representation.

According to Ofcom, half of UK mobile users said they received a suspicious message between November 2024 and February 2025 via text or iMessage.

Gideon Rabinowitz, 64, lives in Newbury, Berkshire, and is a recent victim of smishing.

Just two months ago, the former IT manager said he was cheated out of more than a thousand pounds, around Ksh 208,600, after receiving a fraudulent text message.

“I felt like a massive fool, like I’d been violated,” he says.

“It really shook me. For several days after, it really left me quite shaken. I felt very vulnerable, and I don’t know who to trust now.”

Mr Rabinowitz was led to believe he was being contacted by his bank, which was reporting a suspicious payment on his account.

Scam alert letting text on a black background. Image used to illustrate the story.PHOTO/Pexels

In reality, he was being messaged by a scammer.

“It started with a text out of the blue asking if I recognised a transaction – yes or no. Two and a half hours later, I was out of pocket by Ksh 208,600.”

He adds: “In part it was about the money, and it was also this feeling of being defrauded, of being looked up to, because these people knew who I was. They knew where I live.”

Scam text messages often pretend to be from large companies such as utility companies, banks or supermarkets. They usually include a link. Once the person clicks on it, they can be sent to a fraudulent website and asked for personal and financial information, which can then be used to convince them to transfer money from their account.

Smishing is primarily done through two devices: a SIM farm, which holds multiple SIM cards, allowing criminals to bombard people with thousands of scam texts.

The second is what’s called an SMS Blaster. It tricks mobiles nearby into connecting with it and then sends large numbers of fraudulent texts in a matter of seconds.

The government says “smishing scams have a devastating impact on their victims”.

“Our Telecoms Charter sets out clear action to secure SMS and reduce fraud across the telecoms sector.

“We are also banning SIM farms. Banning these devices used to send thousands of scam texts will close down a key tool for criminals and safeguard consumers,” it says.

The ban is expected to come into effect late next year. It will make the possession or supply of SIM farms, without a specified reason, illegal.

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