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UK
CONSUMERS VICTIMS OF CREDIT CARD FRAUD IN INDIA
By Prasun Sonwalkar, London, December 11, 2007 (IANS)
For
the second time in six months, hundreds of British citizens have
become victims of international gangs who manage to clone credit
card details here and withdraw money from their accounts in India,
Philippines, Australia and Canada. In the latest instance, hundreds
of villagers of Houghton on the Hill in Leicestershire have fallen
victims. Their card details were reportedly cloned at a petrol station
in the village, and soon found money being withdrawn from their
accounts world-wide.
In
April, a similar scam was discovered in Buckinghamshire from where
credit card details were cloned at a petrol station. A Sri Lankan
embassy spokesman here had alleged when the scam was unearthed that
it was linked to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to
fund its violent activities.
Reports
from Leicester say that in the latest instance, international gang
members managed to install a fake card reader at the till inside
the Houghton Garage, in Houghton on the Hill, and used it to clone
customers' card details.
The
criminals may also have installed a tiny needle camera in the garage
to spy on customers as they entered their PIN numbers. The card
data and the PIN numbers were matched up, and then e-mailed to gang
members around the world, where fake cards were created and used
at cash machines.
In
Britain, most banks have introduced a 'chip and pin' system for
transactions in shops using credit and debit cards. This means that
for every purchase, apart from the card, the customer also needs
to punch in an exclusive pin number.
Signing
for purchases using cards has been virtually phased out to prevent
card frauds. Introducing the 'chip and pin' system has led to a
considerable fall in the scale of card frauds. Industry figures
say that the fraud has been slashed by 3 percent, to £428
million last year.
However,
there is increasing concern over new ways being used to target customer
bank details using lost, stolen or counterfeit cards on the phone,
Internet, email and overseas instead. Experts believe the real victims
of card fraud are banks as they have to reimburse customers for
money taken illegally from their accounts.
A Leicestershire
police spokeswoman said: "We can confirm that we are investigating
a number of instances of card fraud." John Stobart, a solicitor
with Harvey Ingram LLP Solicitors in Leicester and a victim of this
scam, narrated his story following reports of the scam: "My
card was used last week in New York to withdraw US$500 and an attempt
was made the same day in Canada. The bank intervened. I have been
in both Singapore and Hungary on business in the last month and
I thought the card must have been copied at one of these places.
In fact it was more local - Houghton on The Hill".
Garage
owner Jim Funnell told the Leicester Mercury, a local daily: "It's
wiped out most of east Leicestershire and pretty much all of the
village. Of course, as an independent business, you rely on your
local customers, and we were scared that this would ruin us".
"We've
been the centre of a credit card scam which has affected every house
in the village. It's probably hundreds of people. It's pretty much
every customer who used the garage in the last three weeks to a
month.
"I
first had a couple of calls from customers about odd transactions,
but I dismissed it, as we have never had a problem before with card
fraud. But when I had a couple more, I thought there had got to
be substance to it and rang the police.
"It
looks as though there were cameras involved and they may have switched
the card reader in the shop. It could have involved staff or an
ex-member of staff, or it may have been a distraction, when they
switched it while the cashier was off the till.
"Something
happened, but I don't know what. At the moment, all 15 of us in
the store are suspects, me included. We thought we were safe, squeaky
clean even. It has been a mighty blow to find out we've been hit."
In
the April incident in Buckinghamshire, several residents complained
that money had been withdrawn from their accounts from ATMs in Mumbai
and other places in India.
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