Toronto taxi scam: cabbies swiping bank cards from passengers - Action News
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Toronto

Toronto taxi scam: cabbies swiping bank cards from passengers

The next time you pay with debit in a taxi, keep a close eye on your card.

Taxi drivers have taken more than $55,000 from cab riders by stealing debit cards: Toronto police

VIDEO: Julie Piesina explains how taxi debit scam works. Hundreds of dollars went missing from her account after she paid for a cab with her bank card in Montreal.

11 years ago
Duration 2:31
Debit card stolen, account emptied of $3,000.

The next time you pay bydebit in a taxi, keep a close eye on your card.

Toronto police warn that a group of cab drivers has beenswiping riders' bankcards as theypayand then driving straight to ATM machines to empty bank accounts before victims even realizewhat's happened.

Dozens of cab riders have been victimizedacross the city in recent weeks and the crimes are continuing daily, the lead investigator in the case said Friday.

The number ofreports coming into police across the city "has escalated quite a bit" in recent days,Det. Chris Beattiesaid in an interview with CBC News.

He said it appears that a "small group" of drivers iscarrying out the fraud.

Beattie said it's happeningprimarily to people catching taxis inthe downtown core, mostly late at night. But, itis also happening at other hours and in other locations.

"You flag down a cab, they have a point-of-sale machine that's programmed to store the information from your card, they put your card in it, you punch in your PIN numbers, he'll take the machine back, pull out your card and switch it with a fake card from the same bank."

Beattie warnspassengers to look carefully at both the debit card and the receipt they get back. The receipts typically say "Toronto Cabs" or "GTA Taxi" at the top, rather than the legitimate name of the company.

Another red flag is that the taxi driver sometimes says he doesn't have change if you try to pay with cash, said Beattie.

He said it is not clear whether those involvedare legitimatetaxi drivers with major cab companies. Police suggest riders always take note ofthe company and number of the taxi they catch.

Police got wind of the fraudin mid-December when a TD Bank fraud investigator reported a pattern of 12 incidents in which cab riders saw more than$55,000 taken from their accounts.

A similar scam led to charges in Montreal last year. One victim,Julie Piesinatold CBC News how hundredsof dollars disappeared from her account after she paid for a cab with her bank card.

And in the summer of 2014,Peel Regional Police warned of a similar scam happening with both limousines and taxis out of Pearson Airport.