$3.6 Million in Credit Card Fraud Yields 13 Years in Prison. Big Deal.

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The math just does not make sense.  The ringleader of a Chicago credit card fraud team gets indicted in 2015 and two years later, the verdict calls for retribution of $3.6 million and a 13 year sentence, which with good behavior, might be 5 years.

…forget about the retribution, Sebastian Deptula was an unnotable real estate agent and that will never happen. At 13 years for $3.6 million, this generated an revenue stream of $240,000 for Mr. D, though if he gets out in 5, the income effect is more like $720,000 per year.

Credit card fraud still seems profitable, even if you get caught.

In this case of sleeper fraud, where the ring set up accounts under rogue names and then just maintains the card before doing a “bust out”, simple account information created the opportunity.  The events had nothing to do with the recent Equifax fiasco, but the criminals used the same sort of information that was stolen from the 145 million Equifax victims.

Understanding what went on and how it developed is important since there are so many consumers currently exposed in the United States.  PNC and Citi were the lead banks in this Federal case.

Looking into consumer disputes, like the ones you might enter into FICO Falcon the broadly used fraud software, seems to have broken the case.

But, for the convicted criminal, $720,000 a year is quite an ROI.

For the rest of us, watch your back.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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