If only these criminals would use their powers for good and not evil....
So true.
Today Chase let someone withdraw $4,500 in cash, in person from a teller, from one of their branches halfway across the country from us. When I called they said they couldn't do anything until the transaction settled on my account. Um, hello, I thought they would want to prevent any further fraudulent activity on my account. Had to go into a branch. The Chase rep was helpful & nice. But it even took him 3 calls to get anywhere with my account. The fraud dept. told him they had to wait until the activity fully posted. Finally, he just closed my account himself. I think it's bad they not only let someone cash a phony check in person at their branch, but then wouldn't try to stem their losses.

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You guys thwarted the Fraud department's procedures. I can't say I know why they have those procedures, but I would trust what the Fraud people are saying and doing more than random-guy-at-bank.
IMHO the problem is the banks do not try to go after these people.
But how do you KNOW this?
I know that at a large online retailer I know and love, while the normal CS reps and the customers never know "the rest of the story", there is a large and hard-working Fraud department that goes after people *seriously*, but since ti's not the customer taking the loss, it's not the customer's business. They will NOT give info to the customer.
Since it's the bank losing the money, the Fraud dept at the bank might be doing all sorts of things that the customer will never know about.
The thing I can't understand is why Target doesn't have a policy in place to ask for ID when the person is making a large purchase. Let's face it -- $700 at Target is not the norm. Ask for ID.
I don't know about now, but I know just a couple years ago it was in direct violation of Visa's policy to require or even request a photo ID. A merchant could have their contract with Visa yanked if they did that.
I find Chase to be very good about catching things. One time it was us (DH swiped the card at the gas station, then realized he was on the wrong side of the rental's gas tank and too far away to pull the hose over, then did the longest turnaround in history, and by the time he got parked correctly the authorization had timed out...swiped it again and was declined (by Fraud) and we had to use a different card), but other than that they've been right. We've never told them when we are traveling but they seem to know when it's us and when it isn't!
As for where they got the info...who knows? My brother had *just* received his new CCs in the mail, the envelopes were pristine and perfect and exactly on time, and the CC was used across the country before he'd even opened them.