Teenager Sentenced for Card Skimming

Tracy Kitten of www.bankinfosecurity.com writes 1/11/12 about a teenager working at McDonald's used a card skimmer to commit identity theft.  Link to article HERE.
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A 17-year-old was slapped with a 60-day jail sentence after he was busted for skimming credit and debit details while working the drive-thru window at a McDonald's restaurant in Olympia, Wash. This insider scam highlights a card fraud trend the industry needs to watch, experts say

Card-skimming expert and fraud consultant Jerry Silva says the case highlights just how easy it is for insiders to perpetrate card fraud, especially in a retail environment.

"It truly is remarkable," Silva says. "Even if we protect the ATMs and POS devices, insider fraud like this will take place due to the ease with which criminals can get their hands on the appropriate devices. This is an industry that clearly needs an elegant and innovative solution (not EMV) that can at least make it an order of magnitude harder for skimmers to succeed."

Silva argues that the problem "isn't big enough at top tier-banks to warrant any kind of financial disclosure, much less a preventive response. They just write it off as the cost of doing business."
Transactions Monitored

In the McDonald's incident, the teen's card-fraud scheme was foiled before exceeding $13,000 in losses after transaction monitoring traced the fraud. Detectives connected the dots and linked fraud to the Olympia McDonald's when contacted by the Washington State Employees Credit Union about fraudulent transactions hitting member accounts. The credit union found one commonality: All of the compromised cards had been used at the same McDonald's. McDonald's management later confirmed the juvenile suspect had worked the drive-thru every time one of the compromised cards had been used.

The teenager used the stolen card numbers, which he collected with a handheld skimming device, to buy gift cards at retail stores such as Walmart and Toys R Us, according to a news report. With the fraudulently purchased gift cards, he allegedly bought about $13,000 worth of merchandise that he later sold on Craigslist and eBay for profit.



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