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Thermochromic Ink, Other Features
Put Customer in Better Spot
For Michael Baucom, president of Proforma
Print Source, Durham, N.C., it all started with a seminar by
Frank Abagnale Jr., the fraud artist turned FBI consultant
portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio in the 2002 movie “Catch
Me If You Can.” “Abagnale stressed how warning
bands should require some action from the bank teller, not just
list the security features on the check,” Baucom says.
Abagnale’s point was that a request for action helps to
shift liability away from your customer to the bank, Baucom
remembers.
So when a customer hit by check fraud
called Baucom in a panic recently, the Proforma franchisee took
Abagnale’s advice and convinced the customer to include a
warning band on new checks stating: “To verify
authenticity, rub or breathe on oval—color will disappear
and reappear.” The oval is a spot of pink thermochromic
ink that stands out from the blue and green backgrounds of the
new checks. Baucom presented the thermo spot to the customer as
one of dozens of possible additional security features.
“They considered foil stamping, bleed-through numbering,
and Toner Grip, but they kept coming back to the thermo
spot as the best value that would address the issues they had
just experienced,” Baucom says. (Toner Grip is a surface
treatment that yields greater toner adhesion to thwart forgery
attempts).
The customer, a commercial janitorial
service, had suffered a rash of fake checks and incurred
approximately $5,000 in losses. Starting with a security paper
supplied by manufacturer Printegra, based in Peachtree City,
Ga., Baucom supplied new checks in just five days. Printegra
sent additional samples overnight that Baucom showed his
customer.
The janitorial service company had been
keeping its checks in secure storage, but had failed to
implement the daily positive pay check-matching service it knew
its bank offered. On Baucom’s advice, the customer
adopted the service and decided to keep fewer checks on hand.
(Firms using positive pay send electronic files to their banks,
listing checks issued and their amounts. As checks are cleared
through item-processing areas, banks match the checks and their
amounts to the files.)
Proforma Print Source’s customer also
chose a feature to make its checks more scan-resistant. The
fraud artist had scanned the company name, bank information,
account number, and signature from the old checks and used them
to produce a batch of completely different but passable-looking
fake checks. Optical Deterrent Technology (ODT) was deployed so
that the word “Void” appears on the output when the
legitimate checks are photocopied or scanned. The customer also
chose a true watermark, visible and florescent fibers, and full
chemical reactivity to increase the security of its checks.
How did Baucom convince the janitorial
service to pay for additional document security? He
didn’t have to. “It’s like buying an alarm
system for your house after a break-in,” he says.
“Your priorities shift from price to overall
value.” The cost of the new security features was minimal
compared to the losses the customer had suffered. “The
president and the head of accounting spent three or four solid
days in a frenzy talking to the bank, the police and me,”
Baucom says. He says an old saying is true: An ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Because no security feature is foolproof,
Baucom says distributors should tell clients that the aims of
better security include minimizing document manipulation,
shifting liability away from the company, and convincing
criminals to move to an easier target. “Fraud artists
won’t take the time to drill down through multiple
security features when they can easily duplicate somebody
else’s less secure check to a ‘T’,”
Baucom says.
—Chris Wright
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After a fraud artist scanned a janitorial
service company’s name, bank information, account number
and signature from checks and used them to produce different
but passable-looking fake ones, the company turned to Proforma
Print Source, Durham, N.C., for help. The distributorship
enhanced the firm’s security by adding Optical Deterrent
Technology (ODT), a true watermark, visible and florescent
fibers, full chemical reactivity and other features to its
checks.
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© 2005 Print Solutions Magazine |
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