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Dallas Card Skimming Outreach Operation Nets 13 Illegal Devices, $13.5M Saved

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Summary

The U.S. Secret Service Dallas Field Office, in partnership with Tarrant County Sheriff's Office and multiple Texas law enforcement agencies, conducted a two-day outreach operation on April 13-14 targeting payment card skimming and Electronic Benefit Transfer fraud. Personnel visited 462 businesses across Tarrant County and inspected 2,939 point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps, and ATMs, removing 13 illegal skimming devices and preventing an estimated $13.5 million in losses to Dallas-area consumers. The operation also distributed educational materials to businesses on identifying skimming devices.

“It is estimated that skimming costs financial institutions and consumers more than $1 billion each year.”

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What changed

The U.S. Secret Service Dallas Field Office, working with Tarrant County Sheriff's Office, Euless PD, Mesquite PD, Plano PD, Roanoke PD, USDA-OIG, Texas Financial Crimes Intelligence Center, and Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, completed a two-day outreach operation (April 13-14) targeting illegal payment card skimming at point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps, and ATMs across Tarrant County. The operation resulted in the discovery and removal of 13 illegal skimming devices and prevented an estimated $13.5 million in losses to consumers. The Secret Service also distributed educational materials to help businesses identify illegal devices.

Affected businesses in the retail and financial services sectors should be aware that coordinated federal-local skimming enforcement operations are ongoing; compliance teams at merchants with point-of-sale terminals, gas station operators, and financial institutions should review the consumer protection tips provided (inspecting card readers, using chip technology or tap-to-pay, shielding PIN entries) as part of fraud-prevention best practices. The estimated annual cost of skimming to financial institutions and consumers exceeds $1 billion, indicating ongoing regulatory and law enforcement priority.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

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Dallas Field Office card skimming outreach operation nets 13 illegal skimming devices, saves $13.5 Million

Published Date

2026-04-15

DALLAS – The U.S. Secret Service, working with local law enforcement partners, prevented an estimated $13.5 million in losses to Dallas-area consumers this week as part of a two-day outreach operation targeting illegal payment card skimming and Electronic Benefit Transfer fraud.

Law enforcement personnel visited 462 area businesses in Tarrant County during the operation conducted April 13-14. More than 2,939 point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps and ATMs were inspected during the operation.

Teams also distributed educational materials about credit card skimming to help businesses identify illegal skimming devices in their point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps and ATMs.

“EBT fraud is a serious threat impacting families nationwide. Our investigative teams are committed to dismantling these skimmer operations and holding perpetrators accountable. Collaboration with our partners is essential, and together we are making significant strides in protecting the community,” said Special Agent in Charge of the Dallas Field Office Christina Foley.

Personnel from the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, the Euless, Mesquite, Plano and Roanoke police departments and USDA-OIG, Texas Financial Crimes Intelligence Center and Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation assisted in the operation.

“The individuals behind these schemes are relentless, but so are we. Through coordinated efforts and innovative investigative methods, we are disrupting their operations and ensuring that those who exploit vulnerable families are brought to justice,” said Assistant Special Agent in Charge Michael Peck of the Secret Service Criminal Investigative Division.

This effort follows a series of similar operations conducted by U.S. Secret Service Special Agents and Investigative Analysts and law enforcement partners nationwide.

Criminals often steal payment card numbers by installing illegal skimming devices on ATMs, gas pumps and merchant point-of-sale terminals. Scammers use skimming technology to capture card information from credit cards and encode that data onto another card with a magnetic strip.

It is estimated that skimming costs financial institutions and consumers more than $1 billion each year.

There are several precautions consumers can take to protect themselves:

• Inspect ATMs, point-of-sale terminals and other card readers. Look for anything loose, crooked, damaged, or scratched. Do not use a card reader if anything appears unusual.
• Whenever possible, use tap-to-pay technology or use debit and credit cards with chip technology.
• If using a debit card at a gas station, run it as a credit card to avoid entering a PIN number. If that is not an option, consumers should use their hand to hide their PIN to block scammers who may be using tiny pinhole cameras above the keypad area to record entries. Use ATMs in a well-lit, indoor location, which are less vulnerable targets.
• Be alert for skimming devices in tourist areas, which are popular targets.

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Select Photos from the Dallas EBT Fraud Operation

Because they look exactly like keypads for point-of-sale terminals, illegal skimming devices are hard to detect. The reverse side of an illegal skimming device used on a point-of-sale terminal. Because they look exactly like keypads for point-of-sale terminals, illegal skimming devices are hard to detect. Because they look exactly like keypads for point-of-sale terminals, illegal skimming devices are hard to detect. Because they look exactly like keypads for point-of-sale terminals, illegal skimming devices are hard to detect.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
USSS
Published
April 15th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Joint with
Tarrant County Sheriff's Office Euless Police Department Mesquite Police Department Plano Police Department Roanoke Police Department USDA-OIG Texas Financial Crimes Intelligence Center Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Retailers Consumers Banks
Industry sector
4411 Retail Trade 5221 Commercial Banking
Activity scope
Payment card fraud prevention Point-of-sale terminal inspections ATM security
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Finance
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Financial Services

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