Toronto airport credit card scam probed

Published: July 24, 2008 at 10:28 AM

TORONTO, July 24 (UPI) -- Self-service check-in kiosks at Toronto's Pearson International Airport are under scrutiny after several cases of identity-theft fraud.

Credit card operator Visa recently approached the Greater Toronto Airport Authority, which licenses the card readers, with concerns of "isolated" and "increased" instances of credit card fraud taking place among passengers swiping cards to obtain boarding passes, the Toronto Star reported Thursday.

There are about 150 terminals that allow passengers to bypass lines for ticket agent check-in, and 13 airlines make use of them. On Wednesday, in light of reports of the potential fraud risk, WestJet airline announced it was disabling the readers in its boarding areas, the Star said.

Scott Armstrong, a spokesman for the GTAA, told the newspaper passengers concerned with possible credit fraud had other options to check in, including swiping passports or drivers licenses, or simply typing in their names.

Neither Visa nor the GTAA have disclosed any details on alleged fraud or identity theft, the newspaper said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Your Daily Horoscope (20 min)
The almanac (50 min)
Average features key to female face beauty
Want to avoid H1N1? -- fly first class
NBA: Portland 105, Phoenix 102
Low omega-3 linked to schizophrenia risk
NHL: San Jose 4, Anaheim 1
fark
Fugitive doctor tries to avoid capture by performing impromtu surgery on own neck
Photoshop theme: Rejected Christmas cards
Australian hottie swimmer Stephanie Rice wants a new boyfriend for Christmas. Any Farkers wanna...
This is a bat eating a banana in the kitchen. Your argument is invalid
Hurricanes, crime, and poverty notwithstanding, Louisiana is the happiest state in the nation
Fortune picks top 10 dumbest things that happened in the financial world. It apparently took dozens...