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Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 5, 2013 10:38 AM EST
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 5, 2013 1:30 PM EST
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 5, 2013 5:05 PM EST
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Posts: 330
First: March 1, 2013 Last: April 23, 2013 |
Check Fraud by Gangs http://www.occ.gov/static/publications/chckfrd/chckfrd.pdf Some gangs have become actively involved in check fraud. These gangs typically go after corporate accounts and have received a measure of notoriety because of their successes and failures. Example 1: Gangs have traveled throughout the country cashing counterfeit payroll checks obtained by gang members in targeted corporations or financial institutions. They use sophisticated counterfeiting techniques to capture the company’s logo and a company executive’s signature by scanning them and to prepare payroll checks using account information from a company check or a bank insider. They use the same information and techniques to prepare false identification for the people who will cash the checks. If insider information is not available, such gangs sometimes call the targeted company’s accounts receivable department, tell them that they have funds to wire into the company’s account and get its financial institution account number to accomplish the transfer. The deposit never materializes. Such gangs move into a city or town around payday and cash the checks at local institutions that have check cashing agreements with the targeted corporation. Example 2: A fictitious foreign company sends a letter to a person or U.S. company claiming to have a large quantity of money that must be transferred out of the foreign home country immediately. The foreign company asks the targeted person or company to help set up a financial institution account into which the money can be transferred. They offer a sizable commission, while asking for the target’s checking account information. The foreign company’s representative then uses the account information to withdraw money from the target’s checking account using financial institution drafts. Financial institutions should remember that, although the individual or U.S. company acted negligently, the financial institution may be liable for honoring the fraudulent drafts. Gang frauds can be successful when customers are careless and financial institutions fail to secure account information. To protect against such frauds, financial institutions should: • Warn customers about such schemes. • Verify new employees’ backgrounds. • Require proper identification from customers before cashing checks. • Be aware that gangs obtain account information from financial institution insiders, who process checks, copy payee checks, and use discarded receipts and/or statements. • Be aware that gangs will recruit account holders in good standing and request people to open accounts or fictitious accounts (to deposit checks). • Be aware that gangs also will obtain genuine identification issued by the state, in which they are negotiating the checks (be cognizant of the issuance date of the identification). 000. |
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 9, 2013 1:02 PM EST
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 11, 2013 12:27 PM EDT
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 11, 2013 5:52 PM EDT
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Posts: 330
First: March 1, 2013 Last: April 23, 2013 |
Phishing and Fake Check Fraud Threatening Email: CID Warns of Old Phishing Scam With New Twist US Army Criminal Investigation Command. CID Cyber Lookout. On Point for the Army http://www.cid.army.mil/documents/Lookout/Cyber_Lookout/Cyber Lookout_Threating Email Scam.pdf CID has no reports of the scammers acting on the threats and strongly recommends that Soldiers, civilians and family members who receive any suspicious and/or unsolicited emails should delete them without response. However, if someone receives a threat that they feel is legitimate or has any credibility what so ever, they should immediately contact law enforcement officials. The United States Secret Service (www.secretservice.gov) and the United States Postal Service (http://postalinspectors.uspis.gov/) are the primary U.S. law enforcement agencies dealing with these types of scams. U.S. citizens or residents who have not suffered a financial loss and want to report a scam may forward unsolicited emails to the USSS at 419.fcd@usss.treas.gov. People can also file complaints with the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at www.ic3.gov/crimeschemes.aspx#item-13 U.S. citizens and residents who have suffered a financial loss should contact the nearest field office of the Secret Service by telephone. Victims are advised to continue reporting these scam e-mails to law enforcement agencies. 000. |
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 14, 2013 2:39 PM EDT
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Posts: 330
First: March 1, 2013 Last: April 23, 2013 |
Check That Check ! By Colleen Tressler & Karen Hobbs June 22, 2012 - 1:33pm http://business.ftc.gov/blog/2012/06/check-check At the BCP Business Center, we offer tips on how to stay on the right side of the law. But we also do our best to spread the word about the latest frauds targeting businesses — and this one’s a piece of work. If your company accepts checks or online payments, you’ll want to be on the look-out for a scam that could leave you with a stack of worthless paper. Here’s what’s happening: In exchange for a fee and some personal information, fraudsters are giving people “instructions” on how to use bank account and routing numbers that don’t belong to them to pay their bills online, or print checks so they can make payments in person or by mail. In one scheme, scammers are using a variation on the “free money from the government” fraud. They tell people to use the routing number of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta — 0610-0014-6 — to make checks and electronic payments through the Automated Clearinghouse (ACH) Network. (No, we’re not offering a how-to here. The number is no longer valid.) If you get an ACH payment, check, cashier’s check, or certified check with that routing number, look into it. Checks with that number aren’t valid payment instruments. If you take one, you run the risk of not getting paid. So what should you do? Don’t accept the check — and notify the authorities immediately: your state Attorney General, the local office of the FBI, and your bank. What else can you do to protect your business from fake check rip-offs? Train your staff to watch for warning signs that a paper check might be counterfeit, like: no perforated edge on one side of the paper; the absence of security features, like a watermark; a routing number with fewer than nine digits; a bank address on the check that doesn’t match its real address; or a flimsy feeling to the paper. ... There is more! Read the entire article here: http://business.ftc.gov/blog/2012/06/check-check 000. |
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 14, 2013 9:42 PM EDT
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Posts: 330
First: March 1, 2013 Last: April 23, 2013 |
FAKE CHECKS E-CARD VIDEO WEB PAGE Enjoy some music and a visual of a talk about fake check scams ! http://www.fakechecks.org/ecard-view.html R |
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Re: Fake Check Fraud and Scams
posted at March 16, 2013 5:05 AM EDT
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Posts: 330
First: March 1, 2013 Last: April 23, 2013 |
Check Fraud Schemes Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. http://www.occ.gov/static/publications/chckfrd/chckfrd.pdf Fraud schemes involving checks take many forms. Checks may be: Altered, either as the payee or the amount. Counterfeited. Forged, either as to signature or endorsements. Drawn on closed accounts. Used in a variety of schemes. Check fraud criminals may be financial institution insiders, independent operators, or organized gangs. The methods they use to further check fraud include: Getting customer information from financial institution insiders. Stealing financial institution statements and checks. Working with dishonest employees of merchants who accept payments by check. Rifling through trash for information about financial institution relationships. ... There is more! View the entire document here: http://www.occ.gov/static/publications/chckfrd/chckfrd.pdf 000. |