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How does fincrime connect to human trafficking? (Feat. Freddy Massimi, Live Oak Bank)

4 min · I går
episode How does fincrime connect to human trafficking? (Feat. Freddy Massimi, Live Oak Bank) cover

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Freddy Massimi is a Fraud Analytics Analyst at Live Oak Bank, a certified human trafficking investigator, and a fraud professional who has spent his career following financial patterns to their human consequences. In this conversation from Fraud Fight Club Round 3, Freddy traces his path from third-shift debit card fraud at BB&T to elder abuse investigations, human trafficking certification, and now AI-powered document fraud detection. He talks about what the link between financial crime and human exploitation actually looks like in the data — and why fraud teams that understand that connection are better equipped across the board. He also shares a case that changed how he thinks about the job: a pig butchering victim who told him she was planning to end her life. "Trust your gut. Treat every customer like your grandparent." On the technology side: Freddy uses Inscribe at Live Oak Bank to detect AI-generated documents. He's seen the forgery market firsthand — pay stubs available for $10, IDs that pass visual inspection, documents generated by AI tools that leave almost no trace for human reviewers. Topics covered: * AI-generated document fraud and detection * Pig butchering scams and investment fraud * Human trafficking and financial crime * Elder abuse and fraud victim support * Fraud analytics at community banks

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26 episoder

episode How does fincrime connect to human trafficking? (Feat. Freddy Massimi, Live Oak Bank) cover

How does fincrime connect to human trafficking? (Feat. Freddy Massimi, Live Oak Bank)

Freddy Massimi is a Fraud Analytics Analyst at Live Oak Bank, a certified human trafficking investigator, and a fraud professional who has spent his career following financial patterns to their human consequences. In this conversation from Fraud Fight Club Round 3, Freddy traces his path from third-shift debit card fraud at BB&T to elder abuse investigations, human trafficking certification, and now AI-powered document fraud detection. He talks about what the link between financial crime and human exploitation actually looks like in the data — and why fraud teams that understand that connection are better equipped across the board. He also shares a case that changed how he thinks about the job: a pig butchering victim who told him she was planning to end her life. "Trust your gut. Treat every customer like your grandparent." On the technology side: Freddy uses Inscribe at Live Oak Bank to detect AI-generated documents. He's seen the forgery market firsthand — pay stubs available for $10, IDs that pass visual inspection, documents generated by AI tools that leave almost no trace for human reviewers. Topics covered: * AI-generated document fraud and detection * Pig butchering scams and investment fraud * Human trafficking and financial crime * Elder abuse and fraud victim support * Fraud analytics at community banks

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What happens when we change the language around fraud? | Feat. Tracy Hall, Author & Victim Advocate

Tracy Hall lost over $300,000 to a romance scammer. For the first two years, shame kept her silent — the same shame that keeps most victims from coming forward. She's now an author, speaker, and fraud victim advocate. She co-authored a language guide with the Australian government to change how fraud is reported in the media. One of the nine principles: never say a victim "lost" money. Money was stolen. At Fraud Fight Club Round 3, Tracy talks about why the language around fraud matters, what it takes to rebuild after financial and emotional devastation, and why she keeps showing up for people who don't yet have their own strength. Topics covered: * Romance fraud and pig butchering scams * Fraud victim advocacy and support * Media language and how we talk about scams * Shame, silence, and survivor recovery * Women in fraud prevention and awareness

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episode Are you red-teaming your fraud defenses before it's too late? (Feat. Amy Davis, Capital One) cover

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episode Why is check fraud still rising? (Feat. Denise Richards, Regions Bank) cover

Why is check fraud still rising? (Feat. Denise Richards, Regions Bank)

Denise Schott manages fraud operations at Regions Bank, overseeing customer claims, fraud detection, and new account screening. With nearly 30 years in banking fraud — including time at JPMorgan Chase going back to its Bank One days — she's seen the field change significantly. In this conversation from Fraud Fight Club Round 3, Denise talks about the career practice that's served her most: rotating roles every five to six years to stay sharp and invite outside perspective. She also covers the shift from loss prevention to customer experience balance, the rise of payment fraud targeting consumers directly, and why check fraud isn't going anywhere. It's currently running 2-3x higher than pre-2021 levels. Topics covered: - Fraud operations leadership and team structure - Balancing fraud prevention with customer experience - Payment fraud and business email compromise (BEC) - Check fraud trends in 2025 and beyond - Career development in banking and fraud

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