Infograph: How Conmen Duped an Indian Bank of Rs 2.84 Crore

In one of the biggest credit card frauds, conmen have duped an Indian bank of Rs. 2.84 crore in over two months.
Tushar Banerjee
India
Updated:
About 580 unissued credit cards were issued to facilitate 1730 transactions. (Illustration: iStock)
About 580 unissued credit cards were issued to facilitate 1730 transactions. (Illustration: iStock)
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Kotak Mahindra Bank recently discovered a massive credit card fraud after weeks of monitoring suspicious transactions.

About 580 unissued credit cards were used in 1730 transactions generated from seven countries, including India. The loss to the bank is estimated to be to the tune of Rs. 2.84 crores.

An internal probe by the bank revealed that conmen stole data from the newly created credit cards and made duplicate cards out of it. Since the cards were not issued to individuals, the entire loss was suffered by the bank.

Here’s how the bank was duped.

(Illustrations: iStock)

The bank has lodged a complaint with Mumbai’s Bandra-Kurla Complex cyber police station. Investigators probing the case suspect that the bank’s BIN (Bank Identification Number) range card numbers may have been compromised.

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Published: 06 Oct 2015,06:34 PM IST

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