Fraudulent Charity Website: An Example.

9 DEC Education

Introduction

With the advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and increasing ease of website development there is a growing number of scams trying to access your money. You can view Australian scam statistics and get further informed at ScamWatch.

We received a request from a User of Giving Guide asking to verify if a charity was registered in Australia. This User was sent a website link by an acquaintance, fortunately they picked up on some red flags, which prompted the enquiry.

The site will remain anonymous to further limit promotion. It’s a good example of what to consider when determining the validity of a website that may look suspicious or unauthentic.

Please take a moment to examine any unfamiliar websites asking for money as not all examples are as obvious as the one highlighted in this article. Please take your time, don’t buy or donate in a rush and read our other article 10 things to check before donating to a charity.

The Australian Charites and Not-for-profit Commission (ACNC) has recently posted an article informing donors to take care when deciding where and how to donate. ANZ Bank has also put an article together further informing the issue.

Red Flags

We investigated the website in question for further red flags. We found multiple issues to consider. They are not listed in order of importance or exhaustive:

  • This charity is not listed on our website. For good measure we also searched the ACNC website which confirmed it is not an Australian charity.
  • There was no ABN (Australian Business Number) listed on the website.
  • The phone numbers did not match (not in the same country). Possibly from the southwestern quadrant of Missouri in the United States (417) or Georgia, the country, not the US state (995).
Phone number discrepancy. adding to the confusion of legitimacy.

  • The address is in Victoria, Australia (hence the enquiry), which seemed to be an online e-commerce content provider.
  • Every volunteer had the last name ‘Smith’.
Every volunteer had the same last name. While their fist names were also similarly vague

  • They left some “Lorem Ipsum” placeholder text (text used in graphic, print and web layouts) in the messaging.
Lazy editing, didn't remove the place holder text.

  • Every appeal has donation totals ending with ‘000.
It would be surprising if all appeals had all donations in the thousands.

  • It claimed to be the biggest organisation “In This Globe”.
Poor grammar and false statements

  • Four appeals have all equally raised $45,000 out of a goal of $70,000 (64.2%). The “Sponsor a Child” appeal has reached 65% of its goal, the “feed the Children” appeal has reached 70%, “donate today” has reached 77% and “save the children” has reached 85%.
Poor math and attention to detail. photo highlights the discrepancies.

  • There is poor grammar, spelling, and attention to detail.
  • The mission statement is vague.
  • There is no ‘Registered Charity’ Seal. An Australian registered charity would likely have the seal on their website. Pictured below.
ACNC Valid registered charity symbol

Seriously

Although some of the red flags in this article could come across as humorous, it is a serious matter, every dollar that goes to a fraudulent entity reinforces the practice and is not received by the genuine causes needing support. It is up to us to be vigilant.

It is possible, this is the least attentive, well meaning, legitimate, not-for-profit organisation seeking donations, but if their website is representative of their work, would they be doing it well?

To informed giving,

Guide

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About Us

Integrity, honesty and unbiased assessment are at the core of Giving Guide’s mission. The charity sector is important to the economy and culture of Australia, We believe independently assessing the accountability, transparency and effectiveness of the sector beyond what is currently available is important to it's future.

Giving Guide anticipates enhancing the level of governance and transparency in the Australian charity sector. An independent charity advisor would benefit the sector by helping charities consider exceeding the existing governance standards of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) to the benefit of donors.

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