Billionaire Branson targeted in $5 million scam
'straight out of le Carre'
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[October 18, 2017]
By Estelle Shirbon
LONDON (Reuters) - Richard Branson,
billionaire founder of the Virgin group, has revealed he was targeted by
a fraudster posing as Britain's defense minister who tried to get him to
contribute $5 million to a supposed secret ransom payment.
Appealing for information to help identify the conman, Branson said he
suspected the same person had later impersonated him to steal $2 million
from a friend of his by pretending to raise funds for people affected by
Hurricane Irma.
"This story sounds like it has come straight out of a John le Carre book
or a James Bond film, but it is sadly all true," Branson wrote in a blog.
Instantly recognizable with his wavy blond hair and beard, Branson is
one of Britain's best-known businessmen. The Virgin brand is licensed
for use by a range of businesses from airlines to train companies to
telecoms and gyms.
Branson wrote that six months ago, after an elaborate set-up involving a
note on fake government notepaper, he spoke on the phone to someone
purporting to be Defence Secretary Michael Fallon.
The man told Branson that a British diplomat had been kidnapped and was
being held for ransom by terrorists.
He said that while the government did not pay ransoms, there was a
particularly sensitive reason why the diplomat had to be saved, and the
government was confidentially asking a syndicate of British business
people to step in.
"I was asked to contribute $5 million of the ransom money, which he
assured me the British government would find a way of paying back,"
Branson wrote.
Feeling suspicious, Branson checked with the government and was told
that Fallon had not spoken to him. The matter was reported to the
police.
Six months on, Branson learnt that a friend, whom he described as a very
successful businessman in the United States, had been called by a conman
posing as him.
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Sir Richard Branson, founder of Virgin Group and Virgin Unite, takes
part in a discussion during the Clinton Global Initiative's annual
meeting in New York, September 28, 2015. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File
Photo
"When the call happened, the conman did an extremely accurate impression of me
and spun a big lie about urgently needing a loan while I was trying to mobilize
aid in the BVI (British Virgin Islands)," he wrote.
Branson owns a small island in the BVI archipelago which, as was well
publicized, was devastated by Hurricane Irma. The caller took advantage of that
context.
"They claimed I couldn’t get hold of my bank in the UK because I didn’t have any
communications going to Europe and I’d only just managed to make a satellite
call to the businessman in America," Branson wrote.
"The business person, incredibly graciously, gave $2 million, which promptly
disappeared."
A spokesman for Fallon said he was aware of two attempts, one not involving
Branson, to impersonate the minister for illicit gain, and Fallon's office were
assisting the police in their efforts to try to catch those responsible.
(Editing by Stephen Addison)
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