55th Largest Private Company In America Sent Millions To China Because An Email Told Them To

from the you've-got-mail dept

You’ve all heard of this kind of scam before. Some nefarious person or group gets a hold of someone’s email or computer screen, pretends to be someone in some official capacity, and demands a whatever sum of money they can get away with. Some of the time these scammers pretend to be the IRS, or a utility company, or even law enforcement. What these scams tend to mostly have in common is that they go after private citizens en masse, in the hope to entice whatever percentage of the more gullible amongst us to pay up. What you don’t expect to hear about is one of the largest corporations in the United States essentially falling for the same thing.

The Scoular Co., an employee-owned commodities trader founded 120 years ago, has been taken for $17.2 million in an international email swindle, according to federal court documents. An executive with the 800-employee company wired the money in installments last summer to a bank in China after receiving emails ordering him to do so, says an FBI statement filed last month in U.S. District Court in Omaha.

Sort of takes your breath away, doesn’t it. One would like to think that it takes more for any company to move millions of dollars around internationally than a simple email string. Whatever else, this seems to indicate a complete failure of process, with the lack of checks against fraud and mistakes occurring on stunning levels. In attempts to explain how this happened, Scoular CEO Chuck Elsea wove a tail of compromised identities (including his) and coincidences that caused all of this to happen. The tale, however, leaves the reader certain that there was still some serious stupid going on here.

The gambit involved emails sent to a Scoular executive that purported to be from Elsea and the company’s outside auditing firm. The emails directed the wire transfer of millions of dollars to a Chinese bank. But court documents say the emails were really from impostors using email addresses set up in Germany, France and Israel and computer servers in Moscow. The three wire transfers, the FBI says, happened in June 2014. They were prompted by emails sent to Scoular’s corporate controller, identified in the FBI statement as McMurtry. The emails purported to be from Scoular CEO Elsea, but were sent from an email address that wasn’t his normal company one.

Which is precisely where this scam should have died on its scammy vine, wilting under the dry heat of “haha, the boss got his personal email hacked.” The idea that millions of dollars can be ordered transferred from an email address not associated with the company is ludicrous. Die, however, the scam did not.

The first email on June 26 instructed McMurtry to wire $780,000, which the FBI statement says he did. The next day, McMurtry was told to wire $7 million, which he also did. Three days later, another email was sent to McMurtry, instructing him to wire $9.4 million. McMurtry again complied. The first two emails from the faux CEO contain the swindle’s setup, swearing the recipient to secrecy over a blockbuster international deal.

McMurtry has reportedly been cooperating with the FBI and providing them with the reasons he so easily complied with the rogue emails’ requests. Those excuses include some of the scam emails looking like they came from the company’s outside accounting firm and that Scoular had indeed been in discussions for an expansion into China. Those excuses, though, don’t alter the fact that a simple phone call to the parties involved, to Elsea’s office (or, hell, at the watercooler or whatever), or to the general office number for the accounting firm would have exposed the scam entirely and saved the company 17 mil-do in the process. How does something like that happen?

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Companies: scoular

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Comments on “55th Largest Private Company In America Sent Millions To China Because An Email Told Them To”

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31 Comments
sigalrm (profile) says:

Re: And therein lies the real problem...

No, you can’t fix social engineering entirely but I’ll tell you what – Give me a $17.2 million dollar (which, btw, is about 0.28% of their reported assets, if I’m not mistaken) budget to spend on OPsec training across their 800 employees and I’m pretty sure I could put together a training program that would have a measurable impact on their organizations exposure to it.

$17.2 million for a company that size just barely makes it over the rounding error threshold…

Gopher says:

Re: Re: Re: And therein lies the real problem...

So, how do you deal with the fact that with a company like this, 10% of the employees may be moles? That email confirmation likely goes to the secretary of the person who ‘ordered’ the money, and then news of the ‘deal’ will be exposed. That’s the (plausible) reason an email like this comes from a non company account in the first place. CSN were right all those years ago when they sang “Paranoia strikes deep”

tqk (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 And therein lies the real problem...

For such high profile email, send to a mailbox that only the CEO has access to …

Then you’re left with the problem of how to get such self-entitled dinosaurs to accept they need to check their email from time to time. Peons don’t even want to do email nowadays, thinking Facebook is bleeding edge tech. Masters of the corporate universe resent being told they have obligations even peons don’t want to put up with.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

“I believe you’ve confused the victim with the perpetrator. I don’t believe McMurtry actually forwarded the spam to anyone.”

No, GP was on target. Spam exists because the sender knows that if he/she sends enough spam mails, one of them will reach someone gullible enough to do something that makes money for the spammer. The cost of sending spam is very low, so even a few suckers per ten thousand mail can make the enterprise profitable. By being that gullible recipient, McMurtry reinforced the idea that a spammer can sometimes get a gullible recipient. Spam will end when it is unprofitable. Raising the price of sending spam is a non-starter, so it will only become unprofitable by reducing the number of capable gullible recipients. (A gullible recipient who has no money to give is unprofitable.)

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Just goes to show

Idiots exist everywhere. Why is it even possible for a single person to wire that amount of money anywhere at all? You’d think that it would require the approval of at least two people. Also, although it only takes a moment of idiocy to fall for a transparent scam like that, it takes someone truly skilled the art to not have the very first action be to call the CEO to confirm.

sigalrm (profile) says:

Re: Just goes to show

With a company that big ($6.2bn in assets), multi-million dollar signing authorities aren’t that uncommon, especially at the executive level.

I’d be willing to bet that the largest dollar amount wired ($9.4 million) was calibrated to be just under the companies single-signature signing authority.

Absolutely reeks of inside job, although frankly I doubt the controller was in on it. If he was smart enough to put the job together, he’d (presumably) be smart enough to transfer and hide the money in a way that didn’t paint a target on his back.

Anonymous Coward says:

Cultural Failure

These things happen because corporate culture, especially executive culture, sneers at rules as “for the little people” and/or “somebody else’s problem.”

Millions of dollars moved on instructions emailed from a CEO’s personal account reeks of a long-standing attitude of “don’t bother me, I’m important.”

The tragedy is that the guy who pushed the button will get punished, while the bosses fostered such a scam-friendly environment will skate away, certain they did nothing wrong.

Anonymous Coward says:

Hello 55th largest private company in america, i know this looks like a random comment on a random site, and i know this next bit kinda doesnt make sense, but it is infact china’s new email address

I would kindly ask you to send a bajillion gazillion petrol dolars to china@paypay.com as soon as possible….no, dont think about it, trust me im a friend, just push that “send bajillion gazzilion” buton, dont think about, your boss would totally be fiiiiiine with it.

Yours sincerly Not China
Thankyou for your stupidity

P.S
Remember china@paypal.com

Anonymous Coward says:

Ahem...

I work for a 5 person company and we’ve had a few “phishing” emails, including one supposedly from IRS. Every one of them got checked and ‘bit bucketed’. The IRS stood out because it went to the wrong email to start with. I still recall one that when we looked at the message source the url went to porn.com. We had bets going to see if porn.com had been hacked or if they were behind the scam. (We never did find out the answer to that.)

jsf (profile) says:

Not as easy to spot as you might think

I bet they were using Microsoft Outlook and Exchange for their email. When you use this combo a senders email address is not displayed. Only the friendly person name is displayed by default, and this is easy to fake. Unless you have some technical expertise you wouldn’t even know to look.

Now personally I would double check before sending a single penny somewhere, but I know places where millions, if not tens of millions of dollars are authorized to be moved/paid with just a few emails every day.

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