The U.S. Secret Service, alongside local law enforcement and state agency partners, conducted an Electronic Benefit Transfer fraud and payment card skimming outreach operation in Baltimore and the surrounding area on Oct. 22-23.
Personnel visited 493 businesses and removed 22 illegal skimming devices, preventing an estimated potential loss of nearly $22.9 million. More than 3,000 point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps and ATMs were inspected.
Teams also distributed educational materials about Electronic Benefit Transfer fraud and skimming to businesses to help them better identify the warning signs of illegal skimming devices in their point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps and ATMs.
This outreach operation was conducted by the U.S. Secret Service, along with the Annapolis Police Department, Baltimore Police Department, Bel Air Police Department, Cecil County Sheriff’s Office, Harford County Sheriff’s Office and Howard County Police Department. Personnel from the Maryland Department of Human Services also took part in the operation.
Criminals often steal EBT and other payment card numbers by installing illegal skimming devices on ATMs, gas pumps and merchant point-of-sale terminals. Scammers use skimming technology to capture card information from EBT cards and encode that data onto another card with a magnetic strip. It is estimated that skimming costs financial institutions and consumers more than $1 billion each year.
The state of Maryland approved over 51,000 claims of stolen benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program totaling $22.5 million from the fiscal years 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025.
Law enforcement agencies have seen a nationwide increase in skimming, particularly targeting EBT cards.
EBT fraud targets the nation’s most vulnerable communities. Each month, money is deposited into government assistance accounts intended to help families pay for food and other basic items. This enables criminals who steal card information to time their fraudulent withdrawals and purchases around the monthly deposits.
There are several precautions consumers can take to protect themselves:
• Inspect ATMs, point-of-sale terminals and other card readers. Look for anything loose, crooked, damaged, or scratched. Do not use a card reader if anything appears unusual.
• Whenever possible, use tap-to-pay technology or use debit and credit cards with chip technology.
• If using a debit card at a gas station, run it as a credit card to avoid entering a PIN number. If that is not an option, consumers should use their hand to hide their PIN to block scammers who may be using tiny pinhole cameras above the keypad area to record entries. Use ATMs in a well-lit, indoor location, which are less vulnerable targets.
• Be alert for skimming devices in tourist areas, which are popular targets.
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/scott-mcclallen/2025/10/26/us-secret-service-seizes-22-illegal-ebt-in-baltimore-n2665491
Sorry - I got questions. 493 businesses and 22 illegal devices. Any arrests? At all? Nothing in the article about arrests. So, no one gets punished. And an "estimated" $22.9 million in fraud prevented? Is that $1 million per device, or what? And how do you "estimate" that. How much actual fraud occurred before the devices were confiscated? What time frame did this fraud occur? Can you show a clear picture of what a scanning device looks like on a gas pump? Wouldn't it be visibly different from a normal gas pump? Is this article just another fucking scare tactic bullshit without providing any real information?
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry, I'm applying logic and reason to something from mass media. My bad.
You're asking questions here that you should direct towards Townhall or the Secret Service. All I can tell you is that skimmers are a real thing and people do get ripped off. My better half works for a bank and they regularly check their ATM's for skimmers and they have found them and in several cases they, and the cops, have found out who installed the skimmers but I think that is in very few instances.
DeleteYeah, I understand, you're just reposting someone else's article. Would it kill them to post a few pics of what those skimmers look like so we can actually tell what they look like? And yeah, anytime they "estimate" some large amount of money I have to ask questions. My autistic side coming thru.
DeleteYes sir. It would be nice to get more details. I have actually found one of the skimmers on a gas pump right down from my house. It was molded exactly like the face of the cover where the card slot is. It was stuck down with adhesive pretty well. I went inside and told the clerk. She checked it out and marked the pump 'out of order' and called the police. The skimmer can be very hard to detect. I don't use my card very often any more except in a transaction where the person runs it through the reader inside of a business. I also don't use a ATM type machine without pulling and tugging and prying on it with I'm trying to take it apart. That's how I found the one I found.
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