Synagogue members are being targeted by an email scam that asks recipients for donations of online gift cards.
Fraudulent emails are sent to congregants, using email addresses that
resemble a rabbi’s email address, according to the Jewish News of Northern California.
The scam has been attempted on members of Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue, where
11 people died in a mass shooting in 2018, the report says. And it has spread to the Bay Area.
“Somebody is impersonating the rabbi and preying on people’s sincerity and good
faith,” says Gordon Gladstone, executive director of San Francisco’s Congregation Sherith Israel, it adds.
It is not clear how the bad actors are gaining access to the
email addresses of synagogue members. But they are also sending emails to non-members.
It's all part of a growing type of fraud that also targets churches, mosques and other religious
institutions.
“The bogus emails often include the name of the local pastor and a legitimate looking email address. But a closer look should raise some red flags,” the Federal
Trade Commission warned last year.
These would include the act that the email address and the service provider are different from the ones used by the church or synagogue, the FTC
added.
Typically, the imposter will ask the intended victim to buy a gift card — often iTunes, Google Play or Amazon, including the PIN number to facilitate easy access to the cash
loaded on the card.
Once that’s done, "the scammer and your money are gone, usually without a trace," the FTC says.
Affected Bay Area synagogues include: Congregation Beth Shalom
in Napa; Congregation Sha’ar Zahav in San Francisco; Congregation Emeth in Morgan Hill; Congregation Beth Jacob in Oakland; and Congregation Beth Israel and Congregation Netivot Shalom in
Berkeley, the Jewish News of Northern California reports.