Big Whoop: $200 million in Credit Card Fraud = 1 Year in Jail

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I stole something, once.  I was about 7 and in Woolworth’s with my mother.

There was this very cool little artillery cannon intended for use with those old-fashioned green soldiers.  The item was 27 cents.  My mother denied my request and by sleight of hand,  the toy ended in my pocket.  When she saw me playing the same toy at home later that day, my mother challenged me.  When I ‘fessed up, she took me back to Woolworth’s to meet the store manager personally and return the object.  After that, I was on the golden path.

Her punishment, which I vividly remember many decades later, was far more compelling than what was pronounced in the state of NJ recently for running a credit card scam that amounted to $200 million.

One year.  $200 million. Hmmm.

Jeeze, Louise.  The crook was ordered to return $270,000, which was cash on hand. Where is the remaining $199,730,000 or so?  Vaporized.  Nowhere to be found.  Maybe after a year in jail it might surface somewhere in the Garden State.

The card industry puts billions into protecting against fraud, but the prosecution is limp.

Judge Thompson, are you kidding?

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

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