'Off-the-scale' demand fuelling gig ticket scams

6 months ago 52
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Taylor Swifts Global Era tourImage source, Lisa Maree Williams/Getty

Image caption,

Taylor Swift's Eras Tour is the highest grossing tour of all time

By Claire Quinn & Jake Wood

BBC News NI

Huge demand for gig tickets is fuelling scammers who "prey on desperation", a Northern Ireland concert promoter has said.

Figures from the PSNI revealed that almost £300,000 was lost to ticket fraud last year in Northern Ireland.

One person reported losing £600 trying to buy Taylor Swift tickets.

The PSNI and promoters are urging people to buy tickets from reputable sites only.

Joe Dougan from Shine, which organises big events such as Belsonic, said these scams seem to be on the rise.

Image caption,

Joe Dougan from Shine says people should only buy tickets from authorised sellers

"I think it's on account of the demand for concert tickets, which is going up.

"These big shows like Taylor Swift and Coldplay - I've been asked a hundred times at this point if I know where I can get Taylor Swift tickets."

Mr Dougan described the demand to see the star as "off the scale", adding: "I'm not surprised there are a lot of desperate mums and dads out there trying to get tickets for this.

"Unfortunately these scammers prey on people's desperation and it's sad to see because I think overall it devalues the trust that people have in the concert industry.

"The vast majority of concerts don't sell out and the ones that do you can get through authorised re-sellers."

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Taylor Swift's Eras tour was a hot ticket, with high-demand shows like that driving a lot of ticket scams, said Joe Dougan

A 19-year-old told BBC News NI she was scammed after taking to a Facebook group in an attempt to secure tickets for a sold-out Belsonic gig.

Hannah Bowron, from Newtownabbey, used a group called "Ticketmaster Tickets" after the Becky Hill concert sold out from official outlets.

'Seemed pretty legit'

"There seemed to be thousands of people posting on here (the Facebook group) from all over the UK - it seemed pretty legit," she said.

"Lots of people got back to me, many of them that I knew were fake accounts.

"But there was a woman, who commented saying she had two tickets, she was with what I thought was her child in her profile picture. So I assumed it was real," she said.

The account asked Ms Bowron via private message to transfer a £30 deposit to secure the ticket.

"I was excited, so I sent her the deposit, then she just stopped replying.

"Then I realised it had been a scam.

"It was really annoying because it was the second time this had happened to me.

"It has made me be much more safe and careful online," she added.

'Fans are being exploited'

PSNI Ch Supt Gerard Pollock, who chairs the ScamwiseNI Partnership, said "avid fans are being exploited, often by organised criminals".

"We've had reports of people buying tickets through social media platforms, thinking they're getting the real deal only to find out the money they've shelled out is to someone who isn't genuine, and the tickets they've paid hundreds of pounds for never existed in the first place," he added.

"With some big names on tour this summer, demand is always high for those concerts which have, in reality, been sold out months in advance."

He urged people to only buy tickets from authorised ticket sellers and resellers.

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