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The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued a press release warning financial institutions (FIs) and consumers about pandemic-related scams, including some connected to cryptocurrency. FinCEN warns that bad actors “are engaged in fraudulent schemes that exploit vulnerabilities created by the pandemic.”
PYMNTS' September Preventing Financial Crimes Playbook , done in collaboration with NICE Actimize , analyzes the pandemic-era fraud landscape and identifies its many pitfalls. Financial crime-fighters simply won’t suffer this state of affairs. Isn’t it just like a crook to exploit a bad situation?
Financial crime is a pervasive threat to banks, credit unions, FinTechs and other financial institutions (FIs) the world over. Developments Around The Financial Crimes Space. For more on these and other financial crime news items, download this month’s Playbook. About The Playbook.
Business emailcompromise (BEC) attempt scams are gaining traction, targeting billions of dollars in ill-gotten gains. The tally means that the monthly reports have a run rate of more than 1,100 as seen last year, and that’s up sharply from the less than 500 report estimated by FinCEN as of 2016. Targeting County Governments.
Business emailcompromise has come to high school sports. The news comes as the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), part of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, has estimated in recent weeks that fraudsters have tried to scam as much as $9 billion through business e-mail compromise attempts since 2016.
To that end, phishing attacks, more commonly known as business emailcompromises (BECs), have been aimed at Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) officials at credit unions. Krebs on Security noted that the emails sent to officials at the United States credit unions looked like they were being sent by other BSA officials.
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