Justice Department cracks down on microtransaction scams

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Justice Department cracks down on microtransaction scams

1 of 3 | The U.S. Justice Department’s Consumer Protection Branch has filed a number of civil lawsuits that aim to “halt networks of fraudsters that use misrepresentations or unauthorized charges to steal money from consumers’ financial accounts.” File Photo by Goumbik/Pixabay

American officials are cracking down on so-called “microtransactions,” which target unsuspecting consumers, the U.S. Justice Department announced in a statement Friday.

The department’s Consumer Protection Branch has filed a number of civil lawsuits that aim to “halt networks of fraudsters that use misrepresentations or unauthorized charges to steal money from consumers’ financial accounts. Advertisement

Two of those lawsuits were unsealed in a Florida court Monday and name an international network of suspected fraudsters.

One case lists defendants from Louisiana, Florida and the Canadian province of Quebec.

A second case in California lists defendants from that state as well as Nevada, Texas and India.

In both cases, suspects processed client payments using unauthorized charges on consumers’ accounts “and engaged in a variety of other illegal activities, including technical support scams.”

“This case marks a significant step in halting fraud schemes that reap financial gain by scamming consumers and making misrepresentations to financial institutions,” said U.S. Attorney Phillip Talbert said of the California case.

“It also sends a clear signal that we have used, and will continue to use, all means at our disposal to protect citizens from such schemes to defraud.” Advertisement

Justice Department officials contend the defendants use the “microtransactions,” also referred to as “microdebits” to slowly siphon money from an individual’s bank account via “unauthorized charges with a large number of low-value, straw transactions to lower the fraudster’s chargeback rate.”

Chargebacks refer to transactions that are refused or reversed by an account holder’s bank and can eventually lead to account scrutiny or closure.

The micro variations of the transactions reduce the risk of chargebacks.

“These cases mark an important step in the department’s efforts to halt schemes that prey upon individuals and small businesses across the United States,” Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian Boynton said in a statement.

“The department is committed to using all of the tools at its disposal to prevent fraudsters from reaching into victims’ bank accounts and stealing their hard-earned savings.”

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