Scams Ripped From Today's Headlines

When markets and the economy go haywire, criminals cash in.

Think of a headline about the financial crisis, and criminals have found a way to exploit it. Bad credit? Bank problems? Home foreclosures? Each of these, and many more, comes with a matching scam, helping make today one of the most fertile periods ever for rip-offs. Pulling off a successful scam "is all about establishing credibility, and the news gives credibility to 'opportunities,'"says Pat Huddleston, a former Securities and Exchange Commission chief who now runs an investor-protection business.

Hard times breed both criminals and victims. People who are on the moral margin to begin with may turn to crime to make ends meet, says David Perry, of Trend Micro, an Internet-security firm. And people who wouldn't ordinarily fall for some outrageous swindle, he says, might take a chance in the hope of offsetting losses in their stock portfolios. Perry says that starting a year ago there was a "fantastic upturn" in financial scams. That's about when the slide into the bear market began.

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Bob Frick
Senior Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance