Visitors to Riverside's annual Festival of Lights warned about parking scam

Riverside, CA - December 08: People take in the sights and sounds of the 29th annual Festival of Lights display which features fake snow and Christmas-themed displays and roaming carolers performing for diners at the restaurants at the historic Mission Inn Hotel & Spa in Riverside on Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2021. The Inn's six-week holiday merriment continues to Thursday, January 6, 2022. The popular annual tradition was first created in 1992 as a gift back to the community by the owners and keepers of the Inn, Kelly & Duane Roberts. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Mission Inn Hotel & Spa in Riverside awash in Christmas lights in 2022. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

With visitors flocking to Riverside for the annual Festival of Lights, city officials are warning people to be on the lookout for fake QR codes posted by scammers at parking pay stations.

The fraudulent QR codes direct people to websites that ask for credit card or debit card information in an apparent effort to steal financial data.

"Scammers were putting different QR code details over existing ones that would direct them to a similar looking site" to the city parking portal, said Ryan Railsback, public information officer for the police department.

The city has attempted to find and remove fake QR codes, "but we want the public to be aware," Railsback said. He recommended going directly to the city's parking website, ParkAtRiverside.com, instead of scanning the city's QR code to be safe.

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For decades, attending the Festival of Lights based at the Mission Inn Hotel & Spa has been a holiday ritual for many locals and out-of-town visitors, drawing hundreds of thousands of annual viewers.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.