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   ont.politics      Ontario politics      90,757 messages   

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   Message 89,930 of 90,757   
   brewnoser2@gmail.com to All   
   Great tips . . . and all self-serviced   
   17 Jan 19 17:39:30   
   
   Wow.  Taxi users across the country had better be clued onto this game.     
   ___________________________   
      
   Globe and Mail - January 17, 2019   
      
   Six people charged in alleged scam to defraud Toronto taxi passengers   
      
   Toronto police say they have cracked a taxi-fraud scam that allegedly stole   
   substantial amounts of money from hundreds of cab users over the past year in   
   the Greater Toronto Area.   
      
   Six people are facing 262 fraud-related charges for allegedly stealing the   
   debit- and credit-card information of taxi customers and using it to deplete   
   their bank accounts, according to Constable Kristin Thomas.   
      
   “We’re in the millions of a loss when you put them all together,” Const.   
   Thomas said of the sums of money involved. Police received reports of the   
   alleged frauds throughout 2018, but a few months passed before a pattern began   
   to emerge, she said.   
      
   Const. Thomas said the suspects allegedly defraud customers by giving them an   
   altered point of sale debit machine. Once the customer enters their PIN   
   information, they’re met with a “Communication Error” message. The   
   driver then asks for the    
   machine back to rectify the problem, and then switches the customer’s card   
   with another from the same banking institution.   
      
   The customer then completes what they believe to be a proper transaction and   
   removes the card they believe is their own. The driver, using the PIN   
   information collected by the point of sale machine as well as the customer’s   
   card, fraudulently depletes    
   funds from their bank account.   
      
   Amanda Galbraith, former director of communications for the mayor of Toronto,   
   said she was a victim of this about a week ago.   
      
   Ms. Galbraith said she was leaving a downtown restaurant last Wednesday when   
   she hailed a taxi. The car that pulled up looked like a cab, but it was not a   
   familiar company.   
      
   She says that when she tried to pay for her ride, the exact procedure outlined   
   by Const. Thomas happened to her. Ms. Galbraith found out she had been   
   victimized only when she went to pay for her lunch the next day. Her PIN   
   didn’t work and she noticed    
   the card wasn’t hers.   
      
   “While I was sleeping, he’d taken thousands of dollars out of my account.   
   It was over $5,000,” she said.   
      
   Ms. Galbraith said she still doesn’t know if she will be refunded by her   
   bank.   
      
   In an attempt to stop this from happening to others, Ms. Galbraith took to   
   Twitter last Thursday to explain her situation.   
      
   “Nobody likes to say they got duped,” she said. “I did it because I just   
   felt like it was really important for people to know that this happened … .   
   I kind of had a weird feeling that something was off but I just didn’t   
   follow my instincts. So    
   it was just really important to me to say, ‘This happened to me and it can   
   happen to anyone.’ ”   
      
   Const. Thomas said all reported cases of the alleged frauds took place in the   
   city’s licensed taxis, not in cars belonging to ride-hailing apps such as   
   Lyft or Uber.   
      
   Beck Taxi operations manager Kristine Hubbard said the company has many   
   security measures in place to prevent users from being scammed. “Every   
   approved point-of-sale machine in a Beck taxi is very branded and looks   
   identical,” she said. “Being    
   informed is the most important thing, and don’t give your debit card to   
   anyone ever.”   
      
   Ms. Hubbard added that these situations happen only when hailing a cab on the   
   spot, so users should try to order taxis in advance or pay with the app so   
   they don’t ever have to physically present their card. She also said she   
   hopes these incidents don   
   t drive customers away from taxis and toward ride-sharing apps. “The risk   
   exists no matter what service you use," she said.   
      
   This is not the first time scams of this kind have occurred. In 2016, Toronto   
   police warned of taxi drivers stealing bank cards from dozens of late-night   
   cab riders. In 2017, police cautioned about an ongoing investigation into the   
   same kind of operation.   
      
   Although police have caught some of the alleged scammers, Const. Thomas said   
   this issue remains “very active." She urges cab users not to leave debit or   
   credit cards unattended inside a point-of-sale machine and to be aware of cab   
   numbers and cab    
   company names.   
      
   “There are still a number of incidents occurring,” the police report said.   
   “And there are still outstanding individuals actively defrauding the public   
   utilizing various cabs in the GTA.”   
      
   https://www.theglobeandmail.com/files/graphics/0117-nw-to-taxi-f   
   aud/0117-nw-to-taxi-fraud-mobile-large.png?token=0   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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