Andy Cohen printed he used to be hoodwinked out of “a lot of money” after a fraudster duped him into turning in his non-public main points.
The “Watch What Happens Live” host, 55, stated he won a telephone name a few possible fraud on his checking account, and he presented up his knowledge believing it used to be associated with a debit card he lately misplaced.
“Someone called saying they were fraud alert from my bank,” he stated on an episode of his Daddy Diaries podcast closing week.
“Then [they] asked for my Apple ID and password. And I was like, ‘OK, this never happens,’” Cohen went on.
By the point he “bailed out,” the scammers already had the guidelines they wanted.
“I had already logged into my bank app, and I think somehow, my logging in through whatever this site was gave them access to my bank app,” he defined.
The “New Year’s Eve Live” host additionally famous that the fraudsters had hacked the caller ID machine, so the identify of Cohen’s financial institution gave the impression once they dialed him.
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“They were naming credits that I had made — the charges — because they clearly had access to my account,” he recalled.
“What I should have said is, ‘Can I call you back?’ Or what I should have maybe said is, ‘I’m gonna go to my bank and handle this.’”
Cohen used to be at the telephone with the hackers “for an hour and 10 minutes,” and later noticed “these people wired out of two accounts that I have a lot of money.”
They'd additionally scammed Cohen — unknowingly — into putting in place name forwarding, so he by no means won the calls from his financial institution inquiring concerning the massive sum of the transfers.
On the other hand, the truth TV honcho “in the process of trying to get [his] money back.”
“Part of my advice for people is that if something is happening, just go to your bank branch,” he added.
“And when you get emails, look very closely at the email address. It might say your bank’s name, but click on the name, and then the email address will appear, and you’ll see that it’s some other random address.”