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CRIME

Why foreigners in Sweden are falling victim to fake police phone scams

Several English-speaking foreigners in Sweden have reported scam calls where victims are told they are wanted by the police.

Why foreigners in Sweden are falling victim to fake police phone scams
Several foreigners have fallen victim to computerised voice fraud in Sweden. Photo: Emilie Holtet/NTB

English-speaking foreigners, including several international students, have fallen for the scam, which starts with a phone call in which a computerised voice informs the victim that someone has been arrested and that they need to contact the police on a certain number. 

“We have received nearly 380 reports during February 2024, and in 25 of these cases the victim paid out money to the perpetrator,” Lotta Mauritzon, an expert at the National Fraud Centre, told The Local.

“The victims have different ages but most are in ages between the age of 21 and 40 years old. In several cases, they seem to be foreign students.” 

The recorded calls are in English, and come in two variants, she said, with callers claiming to be either from the Swedish police or from the international crime agency Interpol.  

There are two main scams used by fraudsters at the moment:

The ID theft scam

The perpetrator claims your ID has been stolen and that you are now accused of a crime like narcotic, weapon or other offences.

“In several cases they say that the narcotics were found in a vehicle that was rented out in your name, with your ID,” Mauritzon said.

She said the scammers tell you that “you have to secure your money and transfer it to an account in another bank”.

The ‘arrested in absentia’ scam

In this scam, the perpetrator claims you have been arrested in absentia and been accused of different crimes. Pending the trial, the victim has to secure his or her money. 

In two different reports, the precorded computerised message was as follows: 

“This is from the Swedish Police. You are arrested in your absence. If you want to speak to a police superintendent, press one.”

What is the Swedish Police doing about the scams (aside from contacting The Local)? 

Sweden’s National Police have set up an English language website to try to prevent additional foreigners falling victim to the crime, and have also created a poster in English

“Right now, fraudsters are calling with automated computerised voices,” the website reads. “They can say that there is a warrant for your arrest and that you are wanted. The police will never contact you with an automated voice in English. Hang up and don’t trust the caller.” 

“The fraudster may call and request personal data or ask you to identify yourself with your bank eID, or share codes from a bank token or bank card,” the poster warns. 

Do not do this. Police will never ask you to perform a BankID identification. 

If you suspect you may have fallen for one of these phone scams, you should immediately contact your bank to freeze your accounts, and then you ring 114 14 to make a police report.

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For members

ECONOMY

What Taylor Swift’s Stockholm gigs tell us about the Swedish economy

Taylor Swift's visit to Stockholm is expected to boost the capital's economy with international fans grabbing a 'bargain' thanks to the low Swedish krona, despite the fact that hotel rooms are almost 300 percent more expensive than normal.

What Taylor Swift's Stockholm gigs tell us about the Swedish economy

The weak Swedish currency, the krona, means tickets for Swift’s three Stockholm dates are more affordable than elsewhere for many foreigners.

Fans around the world seem to have heeded Swift’s lyric “Grab your passport and my hand”, with “Swifties” from 130 countries flocking to Stockholm. Many queued through the night outside the Stockholm arena before the US star’s first concert on Friday.

“In total we will see approximately 150,000 people attending the concerts in Stockholm. Of them, 120,000 will be traveling to Stockholm,” Stockholm Chamber of Commerce chief economist Carl Bergkvist told AFP.

“They will be spending approximately half a billion Swedish kronor ($46 million) during their stay here in Stockholm,” he said.

That is money dished out on hotels, meals, shopping and transport, among other things, but not concert tickets or flights, Bergkvist said.

After opening her European tour in Paris last weekend, Swift’s Stockholm shows are her only dates in the Nordic region.

The Visit Stockholm tourism agency was also in on the hype, with its webpage on Friday proudly declaring “Welcome to Swiftholm”.

But last-minute tourists will struggle to find a hotel room in the city.

“We have approximately 40,000 rooms in Stockholm – 80,000 beds – and 120,000 people coming here. So we will be out of hotel rooms and we see a price spike of approximately 295 percent,” Bergkvist said.

“As soon as these three concerts were announced, there was immediately a surge in demand,” Åsa Lilja, commercial director at hotel chain Ligula Hospitality Group, told AFP.

“This also led to a rise in prices,” she said.

Swift-flation?

Sweden has only recently managed to bring down recent years’ stubbornly high inflation.

Economists have expressed fears that the Swift craze could send Swedish consumer prices rising again, as they did when pop diva Beyoncé opened her European tour in Stockholm last May.

“There’s a risk that prices will rise for hotel and restaurant visits, the concert tickets and everything that goes along with” the show, Danske Bank economist Michael Grahn wrote in a note.

However, “the price pressure would have to be even stronger than (the Beyoncé effect in May) last year to be reflected in the inflation figures”.

Swedish central bank governor Erik Thedeen even took the influx of foreign Swifties as a sign that the Swedish “krona was fundamentally undervalued”.

“It’s clearly a bargain to come to Stockholm,” he said.

Meanwhile, fans seemed ready to spend whatever it takes to see Swift perform.

“I spent around 7,500 kronor ($697) in total for three tickets. I think it’s worth it,” said Filippa, a 21-year-old Swedish fan queuing up early Friday for the evening’s concert.

 
 
 
 
 
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