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Atlantic Beach Police are investigating an email phishing scam where the senders claim to be the planning commission, requesting wire transfers.
ATLANTIC BEACH, Fla. — A scam is targeting homeowners trying to make legitimate improvements.
Both the City of Atlantic Beach and City of St. Augustine are sounding the alarm, warning residents about fraud tied to permits.
“The email started with ‘I hope you’re doing well,'” said Atlantic Beach Deputy City Manager Kevin Hogencamp. “Which is, for some of us, right away a red flag.”
Hogencamp says that greeting was just the first of many red flags in an email claiming to be from the city’s planning commission.
The email told the recipient their permit request was approved but required a landscaping fee, then went on to include wire transfer instructions.
“A very keen resident of ours who’d pulled a permit with us, it didn’t look right to him,” said Hogencamp. “He immediately thought, ‘You know, something smells here. He contacted us and we said, ‘Oh, that’s not from us.'”
Hogencamp says the concerning thing about this scam is just how targeted it is.
“It’s an intuitive scam that someone or something perused public records and was aware we had someone who pulled this permit,” said Hogencamp. “It was specific to his project.”
The City of St. Augustine shared a similar scam that St. Augustine Police are investigating, which told people they owe money for unpaid permits while requesting a wire transfer.
“We, nor any other city, does business that way,” said Hogencamp. “We’d never ask for any payment through an email.”
Both cities are reminding folks permit payments are handled in person or through the online portal, and you can always reach out to the city directly to check a permit status.
“The police department is investigating with the effort to determine who did this,” said Hogencamp.
Hogencamp reiterated that the city will never ask for a wire transfer.
The City of Atlantic Beach shared the following tips to stay safe and report any phishing emails:
1. Verify the Sender: Always double-check the email address. Scammers use tricky fakes!
2. Look for Red Flags: Urgent requests for wire transfers or threats of project delays are big warning signs.
3. Confirm Directly: If an email seems suspicious (if you have any doubt at all about its authenticity), don’t click links or reply! Contact the City at (904) 247-5800 or email info@coab.us.
If you’re targeted:
1. DO NOT pay or share personal info.
2. Delete the email immediately.
3. Notify your local law enforcement agency; the Atlantic Beach Police Department’s non-emergency telephone number is (904) 247-5859.
4. Forward the scam email to info@coab.us so we can track it.