The Art of the Steal

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Authors: Frank W Abagnale
machine? Yeah, they have that. Well, your bank can put you on reverse positive pay. At eight-thirty in the morning, your bank will fax you a list of all the checks written by you that came into the bank last night to be paid today. You’ll have until two-thirty that afternoon to look over that list. If everything looks fine, you don’t have to do anything, just throw the list away. But if you find a discrepancy, you call the bank and tell them to fax you that check. If you look at it and it’s not your check, you tell the bank not to pay it.
    This product literally does away with the threat of forged checks, altered checks, stolen checks, and counterfeit checks. And positive pay is also on the bank’s teller line. So if I had taken your checks and they were drawn on, say, the Chase Bank, I would obviously go to a Chase branch to try to cash it. But when I go up to a teller at a Chase Bank and present a check, the teller would pull it up on the screen and say, “Sir, this check was never issued as of noon today. The company never wrote this check, so what is this?” So you’re stopped cold right at the teller.
    One of the most common questions I get about positive pay is, what if I send Frank Abagnale a check for five thousand dollars but a postal employee steals the check and Frank Abagnale never gets it? The employee types above my name, Bill Clark, and goes and cashes the check. The check number is the same and the amount of the check is unchanged. How will positive pay catch that?
    It won’t, but it’s not meant to. That’s because that is an altered payee, and under banking law, altered payee checks are the liability of the first bank of deposit, not your liability or your bank’s liability.
    Like any technology, positive pay is not foolproof. I recommend companies use both positive pay and a very secure check to close the loop, lock the lock, and throw away the key.
    WAITING FOR THE PAPERLESS TOILET
    A lot of companies and consumers figure, why worry too much about checks? With computers and debit cards, they won’t be with us that much longer. Well, anyone who thinks that checks are going away is dead wrong. People are always asking me, “When are we going to see the paperless society?” I tell them, “When you see the paperless toilet. No time soon.”
    I’ll be long dead, even if I live to a ripe old age, before checks will ever disappear. The amount of checks we write is growing at a rate of more than a billion checks a year. So they’re not even declining in use. They’re growing. I remember fifteen years ago, when we were writing 40 billion checks a year, people said it would never reach 50 billion, and now we’re at almost 70 billion.
    People happen to like checks. They’re familiar. Many consumers will say, “I like this check. It has some float to it. I like that much better than when the bank immediately goes into my checking account and takes the money out. I also like the idea that I can get the check back and see who I wrote it to and have a record of it.” And we have a very large generation that is not comfortable with smart cards and electronics. They’re leery of new ways of payments, and they don’t fully grasp them.
    Electronic banking is still much more of an unknown frontier. And there’s no forgetting the billions of dollars that banks have invested in electronic readers, sorters, and other check processing equipment. We’re not going to just scrap it and plow money into home banking. There are banks out there pushing electronics, but there are a lot of other banks that would just as soon stay with checks.
    So if we’re going to continue to use checks, you had better learn how to protect yourself. After all, awareness is 99 percent of solving the problem. The moment you accept the fact that fraud and forgery are so easy to accomplish, that’s the moment you’ve taken the first step toward combating it.

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    [COUNTERFEIT CAPERS ]
    I once was interviewed about fraudulent

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