A man has admitted to running a website used by con artists to scam Britons out of £43 million - a major breakthrough in the Metropolitan Police’s largest ever fraud investigation.
Tejay Fletcher, 35, of London, pleaded guilty on Thursday to running iSpoof, a website in which fraudsters were able to appear as if they were calling from banks, tax offices, and other official bodies as they attempted to swindle victims out of millions of pounds.
The total losses to victims, enabled by iSpoof in the UK alone, exceeds £43 million, with the total global losses estimated to be at least £100 million.
Criminal callers posed as representatives of banks including Barclays, Santander, HSBC, Lloyds, Halifax, First Direct, Natwest, Nationwide and TSB.
Thomas Short, Specialist Prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, said: “As the leading administrator of the iSpoof website, Tejay Fletcher helped to provide fraudsters with the tools to cheat innocent people on a shocking scale.”
Fletcher appeared at Southwark Crown Court where he pleaded guilty to the charges of making or supplying articles for use in fraud, encouraging or assisting the commission of an offence, possessing criminal property and transferring criminal property.
Detective Superintendent Helen Rance, who has been leading the investigation, said: “He was the ringleader of a slick fraud website which enabled criminals to defraud innocent people of millions of pounds.
“We are doing more than ever before to protect Londoners from spoofing and cyber fraud and devised a bespoke plan to reach out to victims who were targeted via iSpoof.”
Detective Constable Ed Sehmer, said: “This investigation shows that despite what Fletcher and criminal online services often claim, that fraudsters who use them are anonymous, that’s simply not the case. Police can - and will - track down the people running and using these services.”
Mr Short said Fletcher’s crimes have caused “huge emotional distress and devestation” to victims.
“We want to encourage all those who think they’ve been a victim of a fraud to come forward and report it,” he urged.
“The CPS works closely with police to bring fraudulent offenders like Fletcher to justice and I hope today’s conviction sends a strong message to criminals that they can no longer hide behind online anonymity.”
Fletcher will be sentenced on May 18 at Southwark Crown Court.