Goldhawk Fights Back: A new wave of debit card fraud sweeps across Canada
Article By: Dale Goldhawk
Skimming information from debit cards is the latest growing threat.
This is a weekly column by Dale Goldhawk, Canada's best-known consumer advocate. A journalist, author and broadcaster, Dale hosts Goldhawk Fights Back For You, on AM 740 or at AM740 ZoomerRadio, Monday through Friday from 11 am to 1 pm, in the eastern time zone. Visit his website at www.goldhawk.com.
Bad guys are always eager to beat the latest technology as they beat a path to our hard-earned money. Skimming information from debit cards is the latest, growing threat.
There have been several reports of thieves who have installed special skimmer sleeves around the card slots on ATM machines. They blend right in with the face of the machine, so customers are none the wise when they use their cards to withdraw money. The transaction goes off without a hitch but the skimmer records the card number and the all-important PIN. Later, the crooks can empty out that customer's bank account at their leisure.
Police are now reporting a new wave of thefts, using another of the criminal tools the bad guys find so handy -- the retail card terminal you see in stores, right by the cash register.
First, thieves distract the store clerk and then replace the store's card terminal with one of their own. And their own device has a skimmer that records all debit numbers and PINs. Thieves can then return at a later date, distract the clerk once again and retrieve the phony terminal with all the numbers and PINs.
Police in Edmonton are reporting definite increases in this type of crime. Police in Lethbridge, Alta., arrested a 23-year-old Montreal man two weeks ago, after security guards at an Alberta bank witnessed some suspicious activity. The man, police discovered, was carrying three dozen data cards with PIN codes written on them, along with $1,200 in cash. The information on the phony cards had been skimmed at a local restaurant back in June.
None of this is new information! Can't hurt to repeat it though to reach people who haven't heard of it before. Dorle733
Sounds to me like Interact is stupid. It should not be possible that a machine reader can be changed without alarm and cameras activated. Surely a wireless connection would tell if this machine is the one original installed. My car seems to be better securd than my bank account. Waldrudi
what are we to look for to see if a machine has a "skimmer" in it? Pitch