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Grift Card

Scam:   Thieves make note of the identifying information displayed on gift cards being offered for sale, then periodically call to check if they've been activated, and when they are, they drain these cards of the amounts they contain.

Status:   Real fraud which typically costs its victims between $25 and $500.

Example:   [Collected via e-mail, 2006]

Just a little warning before traditional gift giving time.

Well the crooks have found a way to rob you of your gift card balance. If you buy Gift Cards from a display rack that has various store cards you may become a victim of theft. Crooks are now jotting down the card numbers in the store and then wait a few days and call to see how much of a balance THEY have on the card. Once they find the card is "activated", and then they go online and start shopping. You may want to purchase your card from a customer service person, where they do not have the Gift Cards viewable to the public. Please share this with all your family and friends...

Origins:   According to the alert of the moment, unsuspecting consumers are being defrauded of the values housed in gift cards they purchase off the rack in stores. Swindlers make note of the numbers displayed on cards being offered for sale, then periodically
check to see if these numbers have gone live; that is, that the cards bearing them have been purchased and loaded with monetary values. When they find ones that have, they use them to make online ("card not present" aka "CNP") purchases and so drain them of their cash value before their rightful owners attempt to use them.

We're not sure how seriously to regard this warning. Some retail and law enforcement groups have suggested that although the type of gift card fraud described above has been known to occur, it's relatively rare, and fears of gift card theft are greatly exaggerated. They say more common types of gift card fraud are resellers' overstating the value of the cards they're offering, and thieves' using stolen credit cards to purchase gift cards which they turn around and sell for cash.

Certainly the warning being circulated in e-mail (which was issued by the Jackson County [Oregon] Sheriff's Department as a 9 November 2006 "Fraud Alert") does not apply to all gift cards, but only to those that can be used in "card not present" (aka "CNP") situations, such as when making purchases online. And even among those, only the ones that don't offer additional security measures in the form of encoded PINs (that rightful cardholders have to acquaint themselves with in order to use their cards online) are undefendable against this form of theft.

While a value drainer could in many cases acquaint himself with an unpurchased card's number with great ease simply by looking at the back of the card (prying it from its cardboard base if necessary and then repositioning the plastic neatly back onto its placard), he could not easily conceal that he'd been at the PIN incumbent to the card, a key piece of information he would need to have if he were to use the card online (aka in "card not present" situations). Many retailers who have been hit with gift card fraud have come to require that a specific PIN be keyed in along with the card's number in situations where the card itself is not being handed to a clerk. Said PIN is obscured on the card's back in a manner that requires a covering be scratched away to reveal it.

However, the thief's act of replacing the card onto its cardboard placard does serve to hide the defacement of the card's PIN-protection coating. If someone were to subsequently buy that card without first fully examining it (that is, removing it from its packaging to look at both sides of it), he would leave the store with a breachable card in his possession. Likewise, so would a consumer who looked at both sides of a card he was considering buying but failed to understand the significance of the card's PIN already being easily readable.

While the e-mailed alert suggests selecting cards only from areas rendered inaccessible to the public (that is, in situations where the check-out clerk has to hand them to you rather than removing them from the rack yourself), keep in mind that store clerks have themselves been known to steal, and don't count on the isolation of the cards as surefire and certain protection against this form of fraud. Whether you choose a card from a rack or have a clerk hand it to you, always examine both sides of what you're buying before paying for it, even when that means removing the item from its packaging to do so. If you see signs of tampering, or you see that the card's PIN has been exposed, don't purchase the card. Instead, hand it over to the store's management, pointing out what you saw.

If the card itself is of the sort that can't be used in "card not present" situations, you need not worry about it nearly as much, because for a thief to drain it he would have to have the card itself, not just its number.

Here are some other ways criminals have been known to enrich themselves with gift cards: As for the potential for thievery that gift cards offer the unscrupulous, consider how popular these easily transportable bits of plastic have become. The National Retail Federation's annual Gift Card Survey projects gift card sales will total $24.81 billion for the 2006 holiday season, a $6 billion increase over 2005's $18.48 billion. Furthermore, says the NRF, the average consumer will spend more on gift cards than they did in 2005: $116.51 versus $88.03.

The popularity of gift cards have caused them to become such a large a part of festive season giving that there is even the potential for their markedly lowering the total dollar figure reported by stores for the 2006 holiday shopping season, making it temporarily appear retailers have been badly let down by the consumers they counted on to swell their sales figures and carry the year well into the black. Why? Because gift cards, unlike other baubles shoppers will pick up for their loved ones, are counted towards store sales only when they are used, not when they are bought. This creates what is known as the "gift card effect": the value of gift cards sold in November and December but not used until January works to fatten January's reported numbers rather than those of the closing months of the year.

Barbara "claus and effect" Mikkelson

How to Avoid Gift Card Scams: Last updated:   20 November 2006

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  Sources Sources:
    Gardner, Marilyn.   "More People Give the Gift of Choice."
    Christian Science Monitor.   13 November 2006   (p. 13).

    Monroe Bell, Nichole.   "Protecting Against Fraud."
    The Charlotte Observer.   22 October 2006.

    Zimmerman, Ann.   "Creative Crooks: As Shoplifters Use High-Tech Scams, Retail Losses Rise."
    The Wall Street Journal.   25 October 2006   (p. 1).

    National Retail Federation.   "Holiday Gift Card Sales Reach All-Time High, According to NRF."
    17 November 2006.