Dear Partners,
We detected attempts at fraud related to impersonation of the company's domain and e-mail addresses, including fake messages sent on behalf of Deutsche Leasing Bulgaria EAD and its employees imitating regular communication.
Please note that the only valid domain that appears in Deutsche Leasing Bulgaria's electronic messages is @deutsche-leasing.com, and the website used by the Company as well as Deutsche Leasing Group is www.deutsche-leasing.com.
Any variation of the spelling of the domain with additions and insertions of hyphens, additional or substituted characters, endings, constitutes a fraud intended to mislead you that you are communicating with the Company or its employees. If you come across different spellings of (including hyphenated "-" or period ".") be aware that this is an attempt at fraud (an example of such an impersonating fraudulent domain is the one registered on 16.09.2024 deutsche -leasing-bg.com, from which misleading messages are already being sent).
We urge your vigilance. If the email claims to be from the Company, but is sent from another domain, it is likely a scam. If you suspect an email message is a scam, don't open any links or attachments you see. Instead, point with your mouse but don't click the link. Look at the address that appears when you point to the link. Ask yourself if this address matches the link entered in the message. Never click on links from unknown or untrusted sources.
Be vigilant and avoid the risks of possible.
Phishing attacks: Individuals can use a fake domain to create fake websites and trick customers or employees into providing personal information or passwords.
Email fraud: Individuals may send fraudulent emails impersonating the Company or its employees in order to defraud or obtain confidential information. Do not trust such messages and if they claim changes in used bank accounts to which you should make payments.
Cyberespionage: impersonating a domain to collect data on customers, suppliers, or internal operations.
Beware of the described risks with any impersonation of an email, site, person. To find out if a message is genuine, contact directly the person or institution from which it appears to have been sent.
Do this through your usual means of communication or by using official and trusted sources of contact.