ÚNASE A NOSOTROS EL 20 Y 21 DE MAYO PARA LA CONFERENCIA DE RESTORE

María
De Muth

escocés
McKnight

Screenshot 2023-01-13 at 1.50.18 PM

Naghmeh
panahi

Reportando la Verdad.
Restauración de la Iglesia.

El fraude cibernético le costó a los bautistas de Florida más de $700,000

Por Bob Smietana
Churches, like other organizations, face an onslaught of phishing emails and other attempts at cyberfraud. (Photo: Tianyi Ma / Unsplash / Creative commons)

Staff at the Florida Baptist Convention thought they were sending mission money to help pay for church planting.

Then the money disappeared.

“The Florida Baptist Convention continues to work with federal and state investigators, our internal and external auditors to recover over $700,000 in funds stolen from the convention through cyber-targeting,” according to an update on the convention’s website Monday.

Florida Baptist officials first announced they’d been a victim of fraud last Wednesday but had not shared the scope of the loss. The announcement on the convention’s website was updated after media asked leaders at the convention to confirm the size of the loss.

The Florida Baptists are one of more than 40 state conventions affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. The funds were meant to go to the North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, which partners with the Florida Baptists on church planting.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George. To donate, haga clic aquí.

That process was interrupted when the Florida Baptist staff received an email that claimed to be from NAMB but was not and requested funds be sent to a new account number. The fraudulent email reflected “a general knowledge of the communications and practice between the SBC entity and the convention.”

Wood North American MIssion Board NAMB
NAMB logo

“An investigation is being launched to determine how this knowledge was gained,” the convention said in a statement informing its supporters. “ At this time, we have no reason to suspect malfeasance by any convention employees.”

Convention leaders said they will honor their commitments to support churches and other ministries despite the loss by drawing on reserves. They also said they would add to their cybersecurity, which according to leaders already included “training, regular information systems upgrades, and advanced detection software.”

They also warned churches about the ongoing danger of cybercrimes.

“These types of attacks continue to plague organizations of all sizes and scopes,” the convention said in a statement. “We encourage pastors and churches to remain diligent with the security of their IT and financial systems. This specifically includes critically scrutinizing any and all requests — even those from a supposedly well-known source — that request a shift from historical payment practices.”

Mike Ebert, a spokesman for NAMB, said that agency adheres to “robust cyber and data security protocols, follows best-in-class accounting principles and internal controls” to protect donations from Southern Baptists.”

“We have and will continue to support our ministry partners as they seek to do the same,” Ebert said in a text message.

Earlier this year, a church in North Carolina según se informa lost close to $800,000 after receiving a fraudulent email. The Rev. Johnny Blevins, pastor of Elkin Valley Baptist Church, told a North Carolina television station the church received an emailed bill from a contractor working on the church building.

elkin valley cyber crime
On September 18, 2022, Pastor Johnny Blevins of Elkin Valley Baptist Church addressed congregants visiting the site of their planned new sanctuary in Elkin, North Carolina. (Photo via Facebook)

“Immediately following that email was another email, which we thought was from Landmark,” Blevins told the television station. “It had cloned basically that email and it gave instructions on payment and included the invoice and everything.”

The fraud was reportedly discovered when the contractor called, asking about the unpaid bill. A GoFundMe campaign to replace some of the North Carolina church losses has raised $7,761, far short of the $793,848 goal.

Recovering any funds will likely be a drawn-out process, as the United Church of Marco Island, a Florida Gulf Coast congregation, has discovered. The church lost $1.2 million to fraud in March 2022. About half of the money was recovered, but the church’s insurance company declined to cover any of the church’s losses, saying the church policy did not cover “impersonation fraud,” according to a complaint against the insurer filed by the church in state court. The case was recently moved to a federal court in Florida.

John Hughes III, the attorney who represents the church, declined to discuss the specifics of how the fraud occurred. But he did say many of the cases of cyberfraud affecting churches are similar — often involving fake phishing emails. Those emails are often created, he said, by taking a real email and cutting and pasting its contents, including email signatures.

Hughes warned that churches and businesses need to be wary because of the relentless efforts of fraudsters. Especially when it comes to finances.

“Any instructions that come by email — they need to confirm them via phone call,” he said. Otherwise, he added, “they just wire the money out and it’s gone.”

He especially warned of the need for care in dealing with familiar financial transactions — where people might be tempted to click send without reading the entire email.

Hughes also suggested churches and other groups be proactive in talking to their insurance company about fraud. He argued that in the case of the Marco Island church, the loss should be covered. But the process of recovering losses, he said, will be long.

The church’s insurance company did not respond to a request for comment.

Florida Baptists hope that some of the losses will be recovered.

“We remain prayerful that some of this loss may be mitigated through insurance and/or the recovery of stolen funds,” the convention’s update states.

Bob SmietanaBob Smietana es reportero nacional de Religion News Service.

COMPARTIR ESTE:

¡OBTÉN ACTUALIZACIONES POR CORREO ELECTRÓNICO!

¡Manténgase en contacto con Julie y reciba actualizaciones en su bandeja de entrada!

No te preocupes, no te enviaremos spam.

Más para explorar
discusión

Deja una respuesta

El Informe Roys busca fomentar el diálogo reflexivo y respetuoso. Con ese fin, el sitio requiere que las personas se registren antes de comenzar a comentar. Esto significa que no se permitirán comentarios anónimos. Además, se eliminarán todos los comentarios con blasfemias, insultos y/o un tono desagradable.
 
Artículos MÁS RECIENTES
Artículos MÁS populares
es_MXSpanish

Donar

Hola. Vemos que este es el tercer artículo de este mes que ha encontrado que vale la pena leer. ¡Estupendo! ¿Consideraría hacer una donación deducible de impuestos para ayudar a nuestros periodistas a continuar informando la verdad y restaurar la iglesia?

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.