The Alex Marlowe Show
7:00 pm - 8:00 pm

In late January, the U.S. Secret Service started sweeping cities across the country seeking payment skimming fraud via fake skimmers installed in public places.
Teams sought to stop electronic benefit transfer fraud in Cleveland, Cincinnati, Seattle and Denver.
Criminals often steal EBT and other payment card numbers by installing illegal skimming devices on ATMs, gas pumps and merchant point-of-sale terminals. Then, criminals reproduce those cards and deplete the money.
“This operation was an interagency win. The U.S. Secret Service, and our law enforcement and interagency partners, will not stand by idly while fraudsters prey on vulnerable communities using illegal card skimmers to commit EBT fraud,” U.S. Secret Service Deputy Director Matthew Quinn said. “This effort demonstrates why a proactive approach to cyber-enabled financial fraud is necessary. By educating businesses, identifying skimming devices, and removing them before valuable data falls into the hands of criminals, we deny their ability to steal benefits from those that need it most.”
This is part of a series of Secret Service-led outreach operations that have taken place across the country since April 2024. In 2025, law enforcement personnel removed more than 400 illegal skimming devices during these operations, preventing an estimated potential fraud loss of over $428 million.
Results from each city are below:
Law enforcement agencies have seen a nationwide increase in skimming targeting EBT cards. Each month, money is deposited into government assistance accounts intended to help families pay for food and other basic items. This enables criminals who steal card information to time their fraudulent withdrawals and purchases around the monthly deposits.
Americans should inspect and avoid ATMS that have loose, broken, or damaged terminals. If possible, residents should use tap-to-pay technology or use cards that have been upgraded with security chips. Users should run their debit cards as a credit card to avoid entering a PIN, which is sometimes captured with cameras.
Criminals have stolen about $322 million during fiscal years 2023, 2024, and 2025, according to a federal dashboard that tracks SNAP.