Scam Shield

You should have received this guide through your door in the last few weeks, as we have arranged delivery to every household in Wraysbury & Horton.

We would like to thank The Wraysbury Parochial Charities for their support of this campaign.

Stop-Think-Check

1. It is a Proven Community Model – “STOP – THINK – CHECK”

Adapted from the UK’s Take Five to Stop Fraud campaign (backed by the Home Office, UK Finance, and police).

Simple message for posters, leaflets, talks:

STOP – Never act on the spot.

THINK – Could this be fake? Scammers make things seem urgent.

CHECK – Call a trusted number, ask a friend or family member, or check with your bank/company directly.

Why it works:

• It’s short enough to remember.

• It applies to phone calls, texts, emails, doorstep visits, and even social media scams.

• It shifts the default from “Yes” to “Let me check first”.

2. Recognisable Red Flags

Even without knowing the scam, certain features are common to almost all of them:

• Unsolicited contact (you didn’t ask for it).

• Pressure/urgency (“Do this now or you’ll lose money/go to jail”).

• Requests for secrecy (“Don’t tell anyone, it will ruin the surprise”).

• Payment in unusual ways (gift cards, cryptocurrency, bank transfer to a new account).

• Requests for personal or banking details.

If it has any of these — STOP – THINK – CHECK.

SCAM SHIELD – Protect Yourself in 3 Steps

STOP – THINK – CHECK

STOP – If it’s unexpected, pause. Don’t click, don’t give details, don’t pay.

THINK – Could this be fake? Scammers make things seem urgent.

CHECK – Use a trusted number or website. Ask a friend, family member, or us.

Red Flags – If you spot one, stop

• Contact out of the blue (phone, text, email, doorstep).

• Urgent action needed (“Pay now or lose access”).

• Requests for secrecy (“Don’t tell anyone”).

• Payment by gift cards, bank transfer, or cryptocurrency.

• Asking for personal/banking details.

Remember:

• No bank, police, or council will ever ask for PINs or to move your money.

• If you feel rushed – it’s probably a scam.

• Hang up, close the door, delete the message – then check with someone you trust.