Law firms across Australia are the target of sophisticated cybercrime, and the legal sector handles two things criminals especially want: confidential personal information, and client money in transit. As a firm practising in Queensland and New South Wales, we take our obligations to protect both seriously.
This page explains:
This page should be read together with our Privacy Policy, Disclaimer, and our Client Cyber Alert (which we provide when you engage us). If you have not received our Client Cyber Alert, please ask for a copy.
Our handling of personal information is governed by the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) and the Australian Privacy Principles (APPs), which require us to take reasonable steps to protect personal information from misuse, interference, loss, and unauthorised access, modification, or disclosure (APP 11).
We maintain administrative, technical, and physical safeguards appropriate to the size and nature of our practice. These include:
We also operate our trust account in compliance with our regulatory obligations, including those under the Legal Profession Act 2007 (Qld) and the Legal Profession Uniform Law (NSW). Where we become aware of any irregularity in our trust account, including any cyber incident affecting it, we are required to report it to the Queensland Law Society or the Law Society of New South Wales (as applicable), and we will do so promptly.
No system is immune from compromise. Where we become aware of a data breach that is likely to result in serious harm to an individual whose personal information is involved, we will notify affected individuals and the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) in accordance with the Notifiable Data Breaches scheme.
The single most common attack on Australian law firms and their clients is payment-redirection fraud: a criminal gains access to an email account (often the client’s, sometimes the firm’s), monitors correspondence, and at a critical moment sends a convincing email asking that funds be sent to a “new” or “updated” bank account. The funds go to the criminal and are usually unrecoverable.
To reduce that risk, the following rules apply to every matter we handle.
Our bank account details will not change
We will not change our trust or office account details during the course of your matter. If you receive any communication (email, SMS, letter, or phone call) that appears to come from us and asks you to send funds to a new or different account, do not act on it. Telephone us on the number on this website (not a number contained in the communication) and speak to your matter contact before transferring any funds.
What we will not do
If we are acting for you on your instructions, we will not:
What we will do
We will:
What we ask of you
To protect yourself, please:
Awareness is one of the most effective defences. The following scams are active in Australia and have caused significant losses to clients of law firms.
Payment-redirection (business email compromise). A criminal gains access to a client’s or firm’s email, monitors the matter, and sends a fake email at the moment funds are due, with altered account details. Losses in the hundreds of thousands of dollars per incident have been reported by the Law Society of NSW.
AI-generated voice impersonation. Criminals have used AI-generated voice recordings of clients to telephone law firms and direct payments. If a call to or from us sounds slightly unnatural (odd pauses, unusual phrasing, distorted audio) treat it as suspicious and call back on a known number.
Bank impersonation. Scammers call, email, or message claiming to be from a bank’s “fraud team”, asserting that an account has been compromised and asking that funds be moved to a “safe account”. Banks do not operate this way. If you receive such a call, hang up and telephone your bank on the number printed on your bank card.
Website and domain impersonation. Criminals register domains very similar to a law firm’s real domain (often differing by one character) and may clone the firm’s website. They then approach clients or counterparties from the fake domain. Always check the email address and domain carefully, and if in doubt, call us on the number on our website.
“Urgent” unsolicited matters from abroad. Be cautious of any approach asking us to receive and then forward funds urgently, these are commonly cheque scams designed to draw funds from a trust account before the cheque is dishonoured.
For current alerts, the Law Society of NSW publishes a scam alerts page, the Queensland Law Society’s Proctor publishes regular cyber updates, and the Australian Signals Directorate’s Australian Cyber Security Centre maintains current consumer and small-business advice at cyber.gov.au.
If you have transferred funds to an account you now suspect is fraudulent:
If you believe an email purporting to be from this firm is fraudulent, please forward it to office@hqf.com.au and then delete it. Do not reply to it, click any links, or open any attachments.
If you suspect a website is impersonating ours, please let us know so we can take action with the domain registrar and the relevant authorities.
This page describes our general practices and provides general guidance. It is not a guarantee that information or funds will never be compromised, and it is not legal or technical advice tailored to your circumstances. If you have specific concerns about the security of your matter, please contact us directly.
For any enquiries about Cybersecurity, please contact:
HQF Lawyers
Suite 2, 82 Marine Parade, Coolangatta QLD 4225
T: 0755 069 800
E: office@hqf.com.au
W: hqf.com.au
We may update this Cybersecurity from time to time to reflect changes in our practices or applicable law.
Last updated: May 2026