Europol


Criminals continue to profit from defrauding businesses and consumers.

The counterfeiting of money remains a serious problem for advanced economies, while electronic means of payment offer criminals new opportunities to commit fraud.

The growth of internet banking and of electronic means of payment has been a double-edged sword for consumers and businesses. While it has lessened the dependence on physical cash, it has also provided criminals with new opportunities to commit fraud.

Forging money

While currency forgery is expected to diminish over time as cash becomes less relevant in the digital age, banknotes will not be replaced entirely by electronic means of payment.

As a result, criminals will continue to forge banknotes. The raw materials used for currency counterfeiting will become even more widely available, particularly on the darknet, the hidden internet that exists beneath the “surface web”.

As the worldwide contact point for combating the counterfeiting of the euro, Europol is involved in all major currency forgery investigations in the EU. The agency coordinates joint investigation teams and provides financial and forensic support, as well as on-the-spot assistance, to law enforcement partners in the EU.

Payment fraud

Fighting payment fraud — in particular that involving credit and debit cards — is one of the three mandates of Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3). Through its Joint Cybercrime Action Taskforce (J-CAT), it has supported several high-profile cybercrime operations and investigations, such as Operation Imperium, which targeted an organised crime network active in payment fraud.

In its 2016 Internet Organised Crime Threat Assessment (IOCTA), Europol recommended that EU law enforcement focus on the following operational areas:

  • ATM malware and skimming devices
  • E-commerce fraud with a focus on the transport (airlines), retail and accommodation sectors.
  • The acquisition and trading of compromised financial data
  • and credentials:

Europol has also stepped up activity against CEO fraud cases in Europe. In these cases, fraudsters posing as the CEO or a member of the senior management team in a company trick an employee at the company into wiring funds to them. 

Number of items found: 211
Type
Target group
  • 16Dec2019

    No crime goes unpunished on the Darknet: 11 arrested for buying counterfeit euros

    News/Press release
  • 04Dec2019

    228 arrests and over 3800 money mules identified in global action against money laundering

    News/Press release
  • 27Nov2019

    79 arrested in worldwide crackdown on airline fraud

    News/Press release
  • 04Nov2019

    Europol Publishes Law Enforcement and Industry Report on Spear Phishing

    News/Press release
  • 30Oct2019

    60 e-commerce fraudsters busted during international operation

    News/Press release
  • 22Oct2019

    The carousel of VAT abuse: Dozens arrested in connection with multi-million tax evasion schemes

    News/Press release
  • 15Oct2019

    Euro counterfeiting ring successfully dismantled in Spain

    News/Press release
  • 10Oct2019

    Europol helps partners seize millions of counterfeit goods in OLAF - coordinated operation

    News/Press release
  • 09Oct2019
    INTERNET ORGANISED CRIME THREAT ASSESSMENT (IOCTA) 2019

    Cybercrime is becoming bolder with data at the centre of the crime scene

    News/Press release
  • 09Oct2019
    INTERNET ORGANISED CRIME THREAT ASSESSMENT (IOCTA) 2019

    INTERNET ORGANISED CRIME THREAT ASSESSMENT (IOCTA) 2019

    Publication/Document
  • 09Sep2019

    Operational Centre at Europol: 30 countries team up to combat crime in the Western Balkans

    News/Press release
  • 09Sep2019

    Europe’s second-largest counterfeit currency network on the dark web taken down in Portugal

    News/Press release

Pages

  • « first
  • ‹ previous
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »

Source URL: https://www.europol.europa.eu/crime-areas-and-trends/crime-areas/forgery-of-money-and-means-of-payment?page=2