#JobScams
Secret filming reveals brazen tactics of immigration scammers
Recruitment agents who scam foreign nationals applying to work in the UK care sector have been exposed by BBC secret filming. One of the rogue agents is a Nigerian doctor who has worked for the NHS in the field of psychiatry. The Home Office has acknowledged the system is open to abuse, but the BBC World Service’s investigation shows the apparent ease with which these agents can scam people, avoid detection, and continue to profit. Our secret filming reveals agents’ tactics, including: * • Illegally selling jobs in UK care companies * • Devising fake payroll schemes to conceal that some jobs do not exist * • Shifting from care to other sectors, like construction, that also face staff shortages Reports of immigration scams have increased since a government visa scheme – originally designed to let foreign medical professionals work in the UK – was broadened in 2022 to include care workers. To apply for the visa, candidates must first obtain a “Certificate of Sponsorship” (CoS) from a UK employer who is licensed by the Home Office. It is the need for CoS documents that is being exploited by rogue relocation agents. “The scale of exploitation under the Health and Care Work visa is significant,” says Dora-Olivia Vicol, CEO of Work Rights Centre, a charity that helps migrants and disadvantaged people in the UK access employment justice. “I think it has turned into a national crisis.” She says there is “systemic risk inherent” in the sponsorship system, because it “puts the employer in a position of incredible power” and has “enabled this predatory market of middlemen to mushroom”. The BBC sent two undercover journalists to approach relocation agents working in the UK. One met Dr Kelvin Alaneme, a Nigerian doctor and founder of the agency, CareerEdu, based in Harlow, Essex. His website states his business is a “launchpad for global opportunities catering to young Africans”, claiming to have 9,800 “happy clients”. Believing the BBC undercover journalist was well connected in the UK care sector, Dr Alaneme tried to recruit her to become an agent for his business, saying it would be very lucrative. “Just get me care homes. I can make you a millionaire,” he said. As a potential business partner, our journalist was then given unprecedented insight into how immigration scams by agents like Dr Alaneme actually work. Dr Alaneme said he would pay £2,000 ($2,600) for each care home vacancy she was able to procure, and offered £500 ($650) commission on top. He then said he would sell the vacancies to candidates back in Nigeria. Charging candidates for a job is illegal in the UK. “They [the candidates] are not supposed to be paying because it’s free. It should be free,” he said, lowering his voice. “They are paying because they know it’s most likely the only way.” The BBC began investigating him following a series of online complaints about his relocation services. Praise – from south-east Nigeria and in his mid 30s – was one of those who complained, claiming he paid Dr Alaneme more than £10,000 ($13,000) for a job in the UK. He says he was told he was going to be working with a care company called Efficiency for Care, based in Clacton-on-Sea. It was only when he arrived that he realised the job didn’t exist. Praise says he paid Dr Alaneme more than £10,000 for a job in the UK “If I had known there was no job, I would have not come here,” he says. “At least back home in Nigeria, if you go broke, I can find my sister or my parents and go and eat free food. It’s not the same here. You will go hungry.” Praise says he messaged Efficiency for Care and Dr Alaneme for months, asking when he could start working. Despite promises of assistance from Dr Alaneme, the job never materialised. Almost a year later, he found a position with another care provider willing to sponsor him to remain in the UK. Our investigation found that Efficiency for Care employed – on average – 16 people in 2022, and 152 in 2023. Yet a letter sent from the Home Office to the company dated May 2023 – and seen by the BBC – showed it had issued 1,234 Certificates of Sponsorship to foreign workers between March 2022 and May 2023. Efficiency for Care’s sponsorship licence was revoked in July 2023. The care company can no longer recruit from abroad, but continues to operate. It told the BBC it strongly refutes the allegation it colluded with Dr Alaneme. It said it believed it lawfully recruited staff from Nigeria and other countries. It has challenged the Home Office’s revocation of its sponsorship licence, it said, and the matter is now in court. * Outside of the UK – watch on YouTube In another secretly filmed meeting, Dr Alaneme shared an even more sophisticated scam involving sponsorship documents for jobs that did not exist. He said the “advantage” of having a CoS that is unconnected to a job “is that you can choose any city you want”. “You can go to Glasgow. You can stay in London. You can live anywhere,” he told us. This is not true. If a migrant arrives in the UK on a Health and Care Work visa and does not work in the role they have been assigned, their visa could be cancelled and they risk being deported. In the secret filming, Dr Alaneme also described how to set up a fake payroll system to mask the fact the jobs are not real. “That [a money trail] is what the government needs to see,” he said. Dr Alaneme told the BBC he strenuously denied services offered by CareerEdu were a scam or that it acted as a recruitment agency or provided jobs for cash. He said his company only offered legitimate services, adding that the money Praise gave him was passed on to a recruitment agent for Praise’s transport, accommodation and training. He said he offered to help Praise find another employer free of charge. The BBC also carried out undercover filming with another UK-based recruitment agent, Nana Akwasi Agyemang-Prempeh, after several people told the BBC they had collectively paid tens of thousands of pounds for care worker positions for their friends and family that, it transpired, did not exist. They said some of the Certificates of Sponsorship Mr Agyemang-Prempeh gave them had turned out to be fakes – replicas of real CoS issued by care companies. This woman says she introduced friends and family to Mr Akwasi Agyemang-Prempeh, who collectively paid £35,000 for CoS that turned out to be fake We discovered Mr Agyemang-Prempeh had then begun offering CoS for UK jobs in construction – another industry that allows employers to recruit foreign workers. He was able to set up his own construction company and obtain a sponsorship licence from the Home Office. Our journalist, posing as a UK-based Ugandan businessman wanting to bring Ugandan construction workers over to join him, asked Mr Agyemang-Prempeh if this was possible. He replied it was – for the price of £42,000 ($54,000) for three people. Mr Agyemang-Prempeh told us he had moved into construction because rules are being “tightened” in the care sector – and claimed agents were eyeing other industries. “People are now diverting to IT,” Mr Agyemang-Prempeh told the undercover journalist. UK-based recruitment agent Nana Akwasi Agyemang-Prempeh has pivoted into the construction sector More than 470 licences in the UK care sector were revoked by the government between July 2022 and December 2024. Those licensed sponsors were responsible for the recruitment of more than 39,000 medical professionals and care workers from October 2020. Mr Agyemang-Prempeh later asked for a downpayment for the Certificates of Sponsorship, which the BBC did not make. The Home Office has now revoked his sponsorship licence. Mr Agyemang-Prempeh’s defence, when challenged by the BBC, was that he had himself been duped by other agents and did not realise he was selling fake CoS documents. In a statement to the BBC, the Home Office said it has “robust new action against shameless employers who abuse the visa system” and will “ban businesses who flout UK employment laws from sponsoring overseas workers”. BBC investigations have previously uncovered similar visa scams targeting people in Kerala, India, and international students living in the UK who want to work in the care sector. In November 2024, the government announced a clampdown on “rogue” employers hiring workers from overseas. Additionally, from 9 April, care providers in England will be required to prioritise recruiting international care workers already in the UK before recruiting from overseas. – BBC Investigation team: Olaronke Alo, Chiagozie Nwonwu, Sucheera Maguire, Nyasha Michelle, and Chiara Francavilla The post Secret filming reveals brazen tactics of immigration scammers appeared first on The Namibian.
newsfeed.facilit8.network
March 31, 2025 at 6:20 AM Everybody can reply
The FTC reports a surge in online job scams, particularly "task scams," costing victims over $220 million in 2024. These scams lure victims with fake online work, often requiring upfront payments.

Read More at: www.washingtoninformer.com/ftc-warns-increase-in-online-job-scams

#JobScams
December 15, 2024 at 1:03 AM Everybody can reply
1 reposts 4 likes
#Trending | Between finding #openings, sending out your resume and interviewing, looking for a job is tough. Now a growing trend of #scammers impersonating recruiters is making it even harder. In the last year, #JobScams have been on the rise, according to the Identity Theft Resource Center, a...
How to protect yourself from scammers offering fake jobs
Between finding openings, sending out your resume and interviewing, looking for a job is tough. Now a growing trend of scammers impersonating recruiters is making it even harder.
bizrepublic.com
November 30, 2024 at 11:32 AM Everybody can reply
September 25, 2025 at 3:11 PM Everybody can reply
1 reposts 1 likes
No, You’re Not Fired – But Beware of Job Termination Scams! Scammers are now targeting employees with fake emails and texts claiming their job is at risk, urging them to click a link to review "termination documents" or appeal the decision. #CyberSecurity #JobScams #StaySafe #HR
March 4, 2025 at 2:43 PM Everybody can reply
1 likes
Scammers advertise jobs like honest employers but only want your money and personal info. Here are some potential job scams:
•Work-from-home job scams
•Caregiver and virtual personal assistant job scams
•Mystery shopper scams
•Government job scams
consumer.ftc.gov/articles/job...
#scams #jobscams
June 28, 2024 at 2:07 PM Everybody can reply
Job Scams Are Rising Faster Than Ever!

Job scams are exploding, losses jumped from $90M (2020) to $501M (2024)!

Scammers use fake job offers to steal personal data & money.

WiseIN verifies every user to ensure only real people connect

Join wisein.in now

#WiseIN #JobScams #VerifiedConnections
October 13, 2025 at 8:19 AM Everybody can reply
Job scams can be hard to spot. Here is what to watch for:
1. Real recruiters use company emails.
2. Scammers may ask you to pay for training upfront.
3. Be wary if someone asks for personal info before providing job details.
Learn more: consumer.ftc.gov/consumer-ale....
#jobscams #jobsearch
August 16, 2024 at 2:44 PM Everybody can reply
🔍 Advanced fee scams have evolved into fake job offers. Learn how to spot them and protect your data from scammers.

📖 Read more: fastmail.com/blog/the-evo...

#CyberSecurity #JobScams #Fastmail
The evolution of the advanced fee scam
Advanced fee scams have evolved into fake job offers. Learn how to spot them and protect your personal data from scammers.
fastmail.com
April 3, 2025 at 9:49 PM Everybody can reply
1 reposts 6 likes
From 2024

1774 - thehardnewsdaily: Breaking: 250 Indians trapped … - disabled.social

Breaking: 250 Indians trapped by false employment schemes in Cambodia have been rescued by the Centre. A crucial intervention against exploitation. #rescueoperation #HumanRights #jobscams #cambodia #india […]
Original post on disabled.social
disabled.social
May 24, 2025 at 1:24 PM Everybody can reply
Watch out for fake job offers! 💼🚨 Scammers pose as recruiters to steal personal info or money. If a job sounds too good to be true, verify the company before sharing any details. 🔒 #CyberSecurity #JobScams
March 18, 2025 at 12:43 PM Everybody can reply
🚨 FAKE JOB ALERT 🚨

❌ Stay Alert—Protect Yourself from Job Scams!

🔴 Always check job opportunities through official websites or trusted sources.

🔴 Do NOT Share Personal Details

🔴 Do NOT click on suspicious links

🔴Report Scams

#SriLanka #JobScams
January 25, 2025 at 2:19 AM Everybody can reply
1 likes
Search interest in “indeed scam texts” spiked in mid‑May 2023 and rose again in late August, while U.S. unemployment hit its highest level since late 2021. Read more: https://getnews.me/indeed-job-offer-scam-texts-rise-amid-weak-us-job-market/ #indeed #jobscams #unemployment
September 18, 2025 at 8:15 PM Everybody can reply
Jobseekers beware! 🚨 The FTC warns that fake job 'task' scams are costing victims millions. In just 6 months of 2024, losses hit $220M! Don't pay to get paid! 💸 #JobScams #FTC #StaySafe www.techradar.com/pro/security...
Fake job tasks are costing victims millions, FTC warns
Reports of task job scams have skyrocketed in 2024
www.techradar.com
December 17, 2024 at 8:44 AM Everybody can reply
Remote jobs are booming.
So are job scams. 💸
In 2025, U.S. losses hit $500M+.
Fake CEOs. Fake offers. Real damage.
🛑 Stay safe:
– Never pay to apply
– Check email domains
– Trust your gut
Klinx filters the junk.
Scammers are evolving. So should your strategy.
#JobScams #RemoteWork #KlinxSwipe
July 7, 2025 at 3:37 PM Everybody can reply
1 likes
Combating #Jobscams and #AI-powered schemes is not a passive sport. You must practice proactive strategies and vigilance!

Scruitinize everything!

Job scams are here to stay, becoming increasingly prevalent.

"The Job Scam Report" podcast!

markanthonydyson.substack.com/p/overcome-a...
May 13, 2025 at 9:38 PM Everybody can reply