Notes from a year inside America’s expanding ecosystem of fraud

Notes from a year inside America’s expanding ecosystem of fraud

The Evolution of Fraud: A Tale from 2025

In 2025, fraud in the United States took on an entirely new dimension. This wasn’t just a series of isolated incidents but an ecosystem that was organized, adaptive and increasingly professionalized. This revelation was not the result of a single investigation but drawn from hundreds of observations made over the year. Looking at individual posts on platforms such as LinkedIn, one could see a clear narrative about the transformation of fraud.

Financial fraud in the U.S. has become so sophisticated that it now has its own internal economy, complete with supply chains and customer service. Banks need to wake up to the reality that the landscape has changed, writes David Maimon, of SentiLink.

The New Face of Fraud

By 2025, fraudsters had moved beyond simply stealing accounts; they were repurposing them. Bank accounts, credit lines, business entities, aged emails, and even government benefit identities became infrastructure in a burgeoning illicit industry. These entities were openly advertised on platforms like Telegram and darknet markets, and money laundering became a core product.

What stood out was not just the volume of such operations but the coordination. There was an evident supply chain: identity sourcing, grooming, monetization, and laundering. Each stage was usually handled by different actors who specialized in each area. As a result, suspicious wire activity, account takeovers, and mule-enabled transfers surged simultaneously.

Busting Myths: The Role of Data Breaches

One of the persistent myths in fraud prevention is that identity theft begins with data breaches. However, the reality in 2025 was far more complex. Mail theft emerged as a critical upstream vector, leading to a direct pipeline into identity theft. Moreover, when identities appeared on darknet markets, they were used in fraud attempts repeatedly, often by multiple actors, over years. Exposure matters, but where and how an identity is exposed determines how aggressively it will be used.

High-tech Tools and Coordination

Artificial intelligence and deepfakes played an increasing role in identity crimes and scams. The use of face swaps, synthetic video, voice changers, and AI-generated IDs were observed in live fraud operations. However, what stood out was not just the sophistication of these tools, but also the coordination. Fraud was no longer the domain of a lone scammer – it was a team effort.

Strategic Targeting

Fraudsters didn’t just go for ‘the careless’. They targeted former international students and immigrants, athletes, retirees, disabled individuals, and mid-to-high-income homeowners. Fraud had become more strategic, with identities selected based on expected resistance, not just availability.

Customer Education and Fraud Prevention

In 2025, fear-based messaging was found to only produce short-term compliance. Empowering people with knowledge about how specific actions reduce their risk proved to be more effective. Customer education must be treated with the same rigor as transaction monitoring.

Professionalization of Fraud

One of the striking features of the fraud landscape in 2025 was the evolution of customer service. Fraud markets borrowed heavily from legitimate e-commerce, with vendors offering promotions, discounts, and quality guarantees. This professionalization made disruption harder as taking down a single actor didn’t collapse the market.

Studying Fraud: A Risky Endeavor

Studying fraud is not without risks. Documenting networks, markets, and tactics can provoke retaliation. However, careful, evidence-based and responsible illumination remains one of the few tools that consistently raises the cost of crime. Fraud isn’t static, and neither can our thinking be.

As we continue to navigate this new landscape of fraud, it is crucial that we adapt our systems and strategies to reflect the new level of danger. The onus is on us to understand fraud as a system and recognize that fraudsters adapt fastest where institutions assume stability.

For more insights, click here.

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John Wick

ABJ, a Senior Writer at All Banking, brings over 10 years of automotive journalism experience. He provides insightful coverage of the latest banking jobs across the American and European markets.
Picture of John Wick

John Wick

ABJ, a Senior Writer at All Banking, brings over 10 years of automotive journalism experience. He provides insightful coverage of the latest banking jobs across the American and European markets.
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