TSB teams up with the Met to tackle fraud

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TSB has embarked upon a new £200,000 partnership with the Metropolitan Police to improve the fight against fraud and hunt down the criminals that sit behind it.

Fraud is now one of the most common crimes in the UK with over £2 million lost every day. Figures revealed by the Met last year showed that over 3,500 Londoners are reporting fraud and cybercrimes each month with many more attacks going unreported or detected.

To help overcome this, TSB has today announced a new partnership with the Metropolitan Police, initially focusing on boroughs in the South East of London. The partnership will be supported by the London Digital Security Centre and also involve the local authorities within Lewisham, Bexley and the Royal Borough of Greenwich. Working together, the aim is to target-harden local communities, and to disrupt and prevent more would-be-fraudsters before they are able to commit crime.

In support of this collaboration, TSB has invested £200,000 this year to deliver activity in the fight against fraud. The funding will help to increase the ability of the police and local partners to work together on fraud prevention and enforcement; enhance the skills of officers and staff – particularly within the Met’s Special Constabulary – and finance new and innovative ways of tackling fraud at a local level, including ongoing support costs for the Met’s Cybertools app, for front-line police officers.

Superintendent Sean McDermid of the Met’s South East Basic Command Unit, said: “This is a fantastic opportunity to work with the banking industry to make a real difference, not only to our communities in the South East but also our volunteers and wider workforce.

“Fraud is a serious epidemic and only through building positive relationships between the police, banks, business and London’s communities, can we tackle it. We all have our part to play and I would urge everyone to be vigilant to potential scams and to think before they act. Fraud can happen to any of us.”

Richard Meddings, TSB’s executive chairman, added: “TSB’s experience last year shows the scale and risk of fraud in a digital age. Fraud is a serious and organised crime, and we want to hunt down the criminals targeting customers. That’s why we’ve put our learning into practice to work with the Met to help ensure fraud is a high-risk crime.

“The partnership announced today will help customers of every bank and business avoid being duped. It will improve fraud detection, drive greater collaboration across the industry, and, crucially, put criminals behind bars.

“Our ambition is to roll partnerships like this to regional police forces right across the UK to support them in their fight against financial crime.”

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