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Thieves are using your credit card to make purchases -- even when you never lost it

Posted at 7:38 PM, Dec 29, 2018
and last updated 2018-12-30 17:11:35-05

DELRAY BEACH, Fla. - All it takes is a swipe, and the information from your credit card’s magnetic stripe could be on its way to the "dark net."

Thieves plant skimming devices at gas stations and ATMs to steal your card info, but according to Delray Beach Police Detective Kimberly Mead, that is only half the battle scammers face.

Next, they need to find a card with a magnetic stripe to hold the information.

"Anything that has a magnetic stripe on the back can be turned into a credit card,” Mead told Contact 5’s crime investigator Merris Badcock. “Hotel keys, gift cards, gas station cards, anything that has a magnetic stripe."

This includes lost, stolen and seemingly useless cards you threw away in the trash.

“They are just going to be a piece of plastic to someone, but if [scammers] have a credit card number, which they obtained through the internet or from a skimming device, they can input that information onto the magnetic stripe [using a card reader],” said Mead. “Now, that card is useful to them again.”

Recently, Mead busted a Delray Beach man for reprogramming credit cards with stolen information.

“We see this quite frequently,” Mead said.

In her most recent case, Mead says she was tipped off when “the credit card number on the receipt did not match the numbers written on the front of the card.”

Then, using the same type of card reader thieves use to re-encode magnetic stripes, Mead checked the internal data on the man’s credit cards.

“When we swiped the magnetic stripe, the number that showed up on the screen did not match the number that was embossed on the front [of the cards],” said Mead.

So what can you do?

“This kind of activity goes hand in hand with skimming,” said Mead. “Pay attention to the ATMs you’re using, the gas pumps you’re using.”

Actively monitor your charges through online and mobile banking apps, and think twice before tossing any card with a magnetic stripe.

“Cut it up or shred it,” said Mead. “Don’t just toss it in the trash.”

Anyone can purchase a credit card reader. Mead says it is not illegal to possess them, but it is illegal to use them to re-encode cards.