TT Club: Carrier Fraud Drives Cargo Losses
January 17, 2023
Criminal
fraud in its many and various manifestations within the global supply chain
is seen by International freight transport insurer TT Club as a primary and
growing threat. Carrier fraud in particular is a dominant occurrence.
Renewed vigilance is required and encouraged by the insurer.
The almost exclusive use of online facilities to process business
transactions allows a myriad of fraudulent pursuits to find opportunities
within the complexities of the global supply chain. These have many
manifestations; from payment fraud that involves existing mandates and
impersonation of executives to procurement fraud featuring false invoicing.
Carrier fraud, in which criminals imitate hauliers and other
sub-contractors, including drivers with falsified documents, accounted for
84% of TT claims involving fraud or deception in 2022. TT is eager to
pinpoint these risks and offer advice to industry on how to not just
identify potential fraud but to minimise and avoid losses through them.
“No one – from freight forwarders, shippers, and carriers to container
owners and logistics, ports, warehouse and depot operators – should
underestimate how lucrative an industry fraud is. Using sophisticated,
low-risk tactics, fraudsters can easily steal large amounts of money or
consignments of cargo,” says Mike Yarwood, Managing Director, Loss
Prevention at TT.
“Incidents of fraud that target international supply chains across the globe
are not perpetrated by opportunistic criminals working in isolation but in
the majority of cases the work of sophisticated organised crime gangs. They
have well-honed methodologies that are adaptable in the face of detection
devices and changes in operating procedures, as the experience of recent
disruption to the freight transport system has proved. Our awareness and
readiness to protect our businesses must be stepped-up.”
TT has produced significant resources1 to assist operators to shield
themselves from fraudulent activities as it sees 15% of its cargo theft
claims arise from fraud or deception. Specific examples include the
intentional submission of false invoices purportedly from an established
supplier but actually generated by a fraudster infiltrating the online
payment system and duplicated or inflated invoices. Other cases, falling
into the category of mandate fraud, experience criminal deception by
manipulation of bank transfer details by a fraudster pretending to be an
organisation paid regularly by the operator by hacking into the victim’s
email traffic and imitating a genuine supplier alter bank transfer details
for payment of a legitimate invoice.
TT found however that carrier fraud dominated its claims of this type last
year. There are instances of fake carriers intercepting haulage instructions
from forwarders or shippers and posing as the authentic carrier; also
falsifying cargo pick-up or delivery documentation to steal loads.
One common tactic is where fraudsters pose as a forwarders using a freight
exchange site and provide false instructions to a driver. They match a
legitimate haulier to a shipper, facilitating the movement of goods. The
fraudster then acts as a ‘middle man’ between these two legitimate
companies, arranging the collection and directing the driver. Once the
trucker has collected the goods, the fraudster provides new instructions to
deliver to an alternative address where the cargo is stolen.
“A
key aspect of this scenario is that the driver and the shipper are not in
direct contact with one another,” explains Yarwood. “To avoid incidents such
as this and other frauds it is crucial to make employees aware of the
possibilities, to take extra care to verify documentation and instructions
directly with customers and/or trusted partners, especially in pressure
situations were a carrier options might be in short supply or when there are
particular time constraints.” He advises.
These are but samples of the various modus operandi employed by those intent
of defrauding supply chain businesses. TT is determined to maintain a flow
of information designed to help the industry combat such practices and to
underline both their extent and devious nature in order to reduce financial
losses and further disruption to fragile supply chains. |