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Community banks and their customers have been increasingly challenged by a rise in fraud and scams across payment types.
Most significantly, check fraud has emerged over the last several years as a leading concern. Mail theft, increasingly sophisticated mechanisms for altering paper checks and check images, and coordination problems among banks has led to mounting losses for community banks.
ICBA also supports industry-led efforts to promote effective information sharing among financial institutions to make it easier for community banks to seek reimbursement for breach of warranty claims. Finally, encouraging customers to move to electronic payments could also help to reduce check fraud.
At the same time, authorized party fraud, which occurs when an individual is fraudulently induced to make a payment, has also grown. While electronic payment mechanisms like wire, ACH, and instant payments are largely secure from a technology standpoint, it is difficult for community banks to detect and prevent these kinds of properly authorized transactions. ICBA opposes widening the scope of Regulation E to make financial institutions liable for these transactions.
Community banks continue to make significant strategic investments in fraud and scam prevention and detection. They have also worked to revisit policies and procedures to streamline mitigation efforts and comply with a complex set of regulations. As a result, community banks are increasingly resilient against fraudsters. Community banks also provide educational resources to empower customers and, when fraud occurs, effective partnership to help them recover.