The Heartland Payment Systems data breach may be the fraud story of year, but ATM and debit card thefts are growing.
The Heartland Payment Systems data breach may be the fraud story of year, but ATM and debit card thefts are growing. Law enforcement in New York City recently announced that a criminal gang had stolen $500,000 from hundreds of customers' bank accounts via skimming devices at Sovereign Bank branches in Staten Island. And a survey conducted by security vendor Actimize shows that almost 70 percent of financial institutions experienced an increase in ATM/debit card fraud claims from 2007 to 2008.
Twenty-three percent of respondents say those claims jumped between 5 percent and 9 percent, while the rest noted growth of anywhere between 10 and 74 percent. In 2008, the financial institutions surveyed lost an average of $744,321 — with some as high as $12 million — to ATM fraud alone, and an average of $145,560, or as high as $1 million, to data breaches. "Criminals like cards and PINs. It is much easier to cash them out, rather than to hire a mule or repackager with stolen credit cards," says fraud expert Mike Urban of Fair Isaac.