Federal agents in metro Atlanta have recovered dozens of card skimmers as part of a focused crackdown on electronic fraud, according to recent reports. These skimmers, often undetectable to the untrained eye, have been secretly attached to credit card keypads to siphon off sensitive personal financial information, including details from Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards. A sweep conducted by the Secret Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and other partnering agencies uncovered at least 40 such devices across the Atlanta area, including shops in College Park, downtown Atlanta, East Point, and Forest Park.
Atlanta, by percentage, ranks second only to New York City in the discovery of skimmers, highlighting the scale of the problem in the region. These criminal acts not only threaten personal finances but also siphon off federal taxpayer dollars allocated for electronic benefit transfer programs. Mark Haskins, a USDA investigator, emphasized the targeted nature of the investigations, telling FOX 5 Atlanta, “We’re looking at the stores the consumers who use EBT would use. The Dollar Stores, Dollar Tree — We’d see it in a Walmart. We try to look at the analytics.”
In a similar vein, agents working with the Secret Service and law enforcement agencies carried out operations in both metro Atlanta and Columbus, confiscating an additional two dozen skimming machines from various retail locations and gas stations. These devices were discovered attached to the bottom of credit card payment machines and ranged from simple pieces of plastic with a keypad to more sophisticated setup capable of transmitting stolen data via Bluetooth…