Prepaid debit card fraud targets utility customers

Tagged Under : Debit Card, Fraud, Prepaid Debit, Prepaid Debit Card

A new wave of fraud involving prepaid debit cards has sprung up across the country, especially targeting residents of Hispanic communities. Officials at Western Massachusetts Electric Company and San Diego Gas & Electric have warned utility customers in both states about fraudulent phone calls from impostors threatening to suspend electric service unless they receive immediate payment.

Instead of trying to get the utility customers to pay for their overdue balances with regular credit cards or checking account numbers, the callers instruct their prospective victims to purchase prepaid debit cards with cash from local convenience stores. The instructions then direct customers to call back a special phone number to make payment with the new card information.

A WeMEC spokeswoman assured local reporters that legitimate phone agents can always confirm their identities by verifying an account’s full service address, account number and amount past due. In a press release, SDG&E assured its customers that it, like most utility companies, does not proactively contact past due accountholders and ask for credit card information over the phone.

According to online scam researcher Joe Wein, fraud rings have learned to solicit payment methods that law enforcement officials can’t easily trace.

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Analysts: Banks tolerate credit card fraud to avoid customer embarrassment

Tagged Under : Card Fraud, Credit Card, Credit Card Fraud, Fraud

High net worth professionals make ideal targets for credit card fraud because some banks are reluctant to subject their most affluent cardholders to embarrassment over a declined transaction, according to a Dow Jones report. Analysts from Gartner and Javelin Strategy and Research investigated why some major lenders had not fully implemented new fraud technology for their elite credit card programs.

The analysts told Wall Street Journal reporter Andrew R. Johnson that new tools can detect and predict fraudulent transactions based on real-time analysis of a cardholder’s spending habits. Preferred merchant locations, product category types and dollar amounts can all suggest that an account has been compromised. However, the typical best practice of declining the transaction or requesting a merchant phone call can cause some wealthy cardholders to switch banks.

Credit card issuers bank on transaction alerts to fight fraud

Instead, bank representatives told Johnson, many credit card issuers have promoted real time transaction notifications delivered via text messages or smartphone applications.

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