Toolkit Module 2: How Synthetic Identities Are Used

Many Ways to Commit Fraud

Unlike other types of fraud, payment behavior does not always indicate synthetic identity fraud. Once a synthetic identity enters a portfolio, its account activity often mimics that of a normal – and even upstanding – customer, with timely and in-full payment history. Once a loss is incurred, there are not any indicators that fraud occurred. Rather, it appears to be a real customer who simply was unable to pay off his or her credit balance.

Consider this scenario where an application for a credit card was received with the following information:

  • FICO score of 750
  • Oldest tradeline was 20 years old, but was an authorized user tradeline
  • The only types of tradelines reported on the applicant’s credit file were unsecured lines of credit
  • The applicant’s credit file showed 8 new inquiries for credit
  • Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) was reported to be $125,000

Upon review, the application was approved, and a credit line of $20,000 was issued. For 3 years, the customer never missed a payment, and was therefore able to continually have his credit line increased to double that of the initial offering. There was then a $40,000 credit line that was maxed out and ended up being charged off by the bank. As there were no indicators of fraud, the account was charged off as a credit loss and never reported as fraud.

Illustration example of criminal activity with handcuffs

Synthetic identities can be used in many ways to commit fraud. While some users are simply trying to make a living, others are financing international terrorism. Despite this vast variation in intent, they are all considered to be fraudulent. Uses include:

  • Fraud for living
  • Payment default scheme
  • Credit repair
  • Money mule activity
  • Facilitating human and/or narcotics trafficking
  • Organizing and financing terrorist attacks

While each fraudster is likely to set up several synthetic identities, the same synthetic also can be used multiple times to increase the payout, whether it is used at the same or various institutions. Fraudsters identify gaps to take advantage of – and when they do, they have the synthetics ready to capitalize on these vulnerabilities.

How Well Do You Know Synthetic Identity Fraud?

Which of the following industries are impacted by synthetic identity fraud?
Government programs
Financial sector
Healthcare
Telecommunications
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

Synthetic identity fraud accounts for how much in annual losses in the U.S. payments system?
10 million annually
Less than $500,000 annually
$100,000 million annually
Billion of dollars in annual losses

Correct!

Incorrect

Synthetic identity fraud is best defined as:
A type of cybercrime where a third party obtains access to an account, such as an email address, bank account or social media profile.
The use of a combination of personally identifiable information (PII) to fabricate a person or entity in order to commit a dishonest act for personal or financial gain.
The crime of obtaining another person’s personal or financial information to use their identity to commit fraud.
None of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

What is true of synthetic identity fraud?
Synthetic identity fraud is a victimless crime.
Synthetic identity fraud only affects financial institutions.
The ease and low cost of creating synthetics identities contributes to its widespread use.
None of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

In the creation of synthetic identities, which of the following is true?
Synthetic identities are typically created for the purpose of evading taxes.
In the creation of synthetic identities, fraudsters often leverage the Social Security numbers of individuals who do not have an active credit profile – such as the elderly, the incarcerated and (most commonly) children.
Synthetic identities are most commonly created using identity fabrication – the creation of an identity using completely fictitious information.
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

How is a synthetic identity created?
Identity manipulation: Using slightly modified personally identifiable information (PII) to create a new identity.
Identity fabrication: Creation of a completely fictitious identity, without using any compromised/real personally identifiable information.
Identity compilation: Combination of real and fake personally identifiable information (PII) to form a new identity.
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

What factors contribute to synthetic identity fraud?
The use of Social Security number as a primary identifier in the U.S.
Frequent data breaches provide increased availability of personally identifiable information (PII) to fraudsters.
Gaps in credit processes.
Limited identity verification.
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

What are the uses of a synthetic identity?
Fraud for living
Credit abuse
Credit repair
Limited identity verification
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

What are the potential impacts of a synthetic identity fraud?
Financial losses
Reputational risk
Job loss
Credit ineligibility
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

What are common characteristics of synthetic identity fraud?
Social Security number provided was never issued or was issued to a different identity.
Credit profile does not match anticipated file depth.
Credit profile consists primarily of authorized user tradelines and little to no individual liability accounts.
Discrepancy in identity information: identity has a Social Security number issued after 2011 but date of birth before 2011.
All of the above

Correct!

Incorrect

Share the quiz to show your results !

Subscribe to see your results

How Well Do You Know Synthetic Identity Fraud?

You got %%score%% of %%total%% right

%%description%%

%%description%%

Loading...

Downloadable Resources

Explore these fraud resources for additional information on how synthetic identities are used.

Document TitleFormatReading Time
How Synthetic Identities are Used to Commit Fraud (PDF)Document5 minutes
The Danger of Money Mules (PDF)Document4 minutes
How Fraudsters Increase Their Payouts (PDF)Document5 minutes
What's Hiding in Your Portfolio? (PDF)Document3 minutes

The synthetic identity fraud mitigation toolkit was developed by the Federal Reserve to help educate the industry about synthetic identity fraud and outline potential ways to help detect and mitigate this fraud type. Insights for this toolkit were provided through interviews with industry experts, publicly available research, and team member expertise. This toolkit is not intended to result in any regulatory or reporting requirements, imply any liabilities for fraud loss, or confer any legal status, legal definitions, or legal rights or responsibilities. While use of this toolkit throughout the industry is encouraged, utilization of the toolkit is voluntary at the discretion of each individual entity. Absent written consent, this toolkit may not be used in a manner that suggests the Federal Reserve endorses a third-party product or service.