
Fraud schemes continue to evolve, and one of the latest trends affecting Money Services Businesses involves contractor-related scams. Unlike traditional check fraud, these transactions often involve legitimate cashier's checks, making them more difficult to identify through normal check verification procedures.
Instead, the focus shifts to evaluating the business behind the transaction and determining whether the overall circumstances make sense.
The scam typically begins when individuals posing as contractors approach homeowners offering services such as roofing, driveway paving, masonry work, foundation repair, or waterproofing.
These businesses often appear completely legitimate. They may have professional websites, branded clothing, business cards, invoices, and positive online reviews. In many cases, the homeowner believes they are hiring a reputable contractor.
After the work is completed, or in some cases while it is underway, the homeowner is instructed to obtain a cashier's check for payment. That check is then presented to an MSB for cashing.
The challenge is that the cashier's check itself is often valid. The fraud lies in the business behind the transaction, not the payment instrument.
Many of these businesses are created solely to facilitate the fraud. They may complete some or all of the work, but the services are often performed by unqualified labor, or left unfinished with no intention of honoring warranties or returning to correct problems.
Because the checks themselves are legitimate, identifying potential risk depends on strong corporate due diligence and careful review of the business presenting the transaction.
One of the most valuable parts of corporate due diligence is looking beyond the paperwork and evaluating whether the overall transaction makes sense.
In many of these cases, the documentation appears complete. The business may have incorporation documents, a professional website, branded materials, and everything expected during a review. On the surface, it looks legitimate.
However, taking a closer look may reveal details that deserve additional attention. For example, a construction company incorporated only days or weeks ago may already be cashing a large cashier's check for a major roofing or foundation project. While each of these facts may be reasonable on its own, together they may warrant additional review.
Consider questions such as:
No single factor indicates fraud, and every transaction should be evaluated on its own merits. However, taking a moment to consider the complete picture can help identify higher-risk transactions before they become larger issues.
This type of fraud reinforces why maintaining thorough corporate due diligence procedures is so important.
Reviewing business registrations, ownership information, supporting documentation, and overall transaction activity helps MSBs make informed decisions while reducing operational and compliance risk.
Strong due diligence is not about assuming every new business is fraudulent. It is about asking the right questions when something does not appear consistent with the overall transaction.
Fraudsters continue to refine their tactics, making scams more convincing than ever. Professional websites, polished marketing materials, and valid payment instruments should never replace thoughtful review and sound judgment.
By combining established due diligence procedures with a careful evaluation of the entire transaction, MSBs can better identify emerging fraud trends and help protect both their business and their customers.
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