Common Schemes
Fraudulent Travelers Checks or Cashiers Checks
There has been a recent increase in fraudulent travelers
and cashiers checks. The criminal usually creates
false travelers checks or cashiers checks and sends
them to their victim with a letter instructing the
victim to deposit the fraudulent checks and then return
a portion of the funds back to the sender, either by
wire or money grams. After the victim sends the
funds, the checks start coming back through their account
and they end up losing money.
Lottery Scams
Originating in Nigeria, lottery scams are
now coming from several parts of the world. Some
other notorious lottery scams originate in Canada
and South Africa as well. These scams
include a letter that explains the victim has won the
lottery or a sweepstakes. The letter is usually
accompanied with a cashier’s check made out to
the victim’s name for a certain amount. The
letter will instruct the victim to deposit the check
and then wire funds back for ‘taxes’.
Fraudulent Emails or Phone Calls (Phishing)
In this case, the criminal may send an email or call
a victim claiming to be from their bank and request
account or personal information for various reasons. (See
below for examples).
Inheritance Scams
Another popular scheme often sent from Nigeria,
inheritance scams are also becoming more popular. Usually
sent by mail or email, the criminal explains that someone
has deceased and you are the only inheritance. The
amounts can vary but are usually fairly large. They
then request that you send them your account information
so they can wire the money from the inheritance to
you.
If you receive any of these items in the mail or receive
something similar, please consult with a personal banker
at one of our locations before you proceed with depositing
the funds or following the directions. Our mission
is to protect you!
TIPS FOR AVOIDING FRAUD
- Always consult with a bank employee before depositing
an item you received in the mail if you are unfamiliar
with the business or individual
- Never give out your account information through
email
- Never give out your account information over the
phone unless you initiated the conversation
- Don’t pay for a ‘free prize’. If
a caller tells you the payment is for taxes, he or
she is violating the law.
- When dealing with fraud - “If it sounds too
good to be true, it probably is”.
Additional Resources
FBI Fraud Schemes
FakeChecks.org
BankersOnline.com
"Phishing" (or "Pharming")
Note: Don't trust an email simply because it looks
like it came from a trusted source. Thieves often disguise
their emails to look like bank websites or online businesses.
They use logos and graphics to look trustworthy. Links
in emails may point to websites that are not "official,"
no matter how real they seem.
One way to avoid getting scammed is to ignore the link
in the email, and type in the webpage address directly.
Also, don't submit any confidential information online.
Citizens Bank of Edmond will NOT ask you to verify credit
card numbers, social security numbers, checkbook numbers,
etc. via email. If we did need to verify confidential
information, we would ask you to visit a branch.
If you receive a phone call requesting confidential
information, you should verify the identity of the person
calling. Find the phone number in your phone book, and
call the person back using a number you can trust.
Samples of possible Phishing/Pharming attempts:
A Phishing email link may open up the actual bank website,
but open up a smaller window from another website. In
the Pharming example below, you see the main window
has the correct bank website, but the smaller window
does not show the address. By seeing the two windows,
a customer might feel confident about the website and
enter their personal information into the second window
- and leave themselves open to fraud.
Email may contain official logos, links to real
websites, and even content that was copied from official
websites. But you should be cautious - they may still
be Phishing attempts. Be cautious of poor spelling or
grammar. Don't trust links in an email; they may point
to a different website than the address shown.

|