Lease fraud, lease fraud, Lease misappropriation, Lease misappropriation, Lease scam, lease extortion, lease scam, bogus lease, duplicate lease.
Leasing crime (fraud) is a 'river topic'. Rule No. 1 From the classics of training for leasing company employees is: "It is the crook who is looking for the lessor, not the lessor for the crook.". Thus, the greatest risk of 'fraud' is with previously unknown lessors addressing an inquiry (either on their own or through an intermediary). Statistics don't lie. I suggest you track fraud cases in your own company. Fraud almost always happens where the customer is looking for a lease, not where the lease is looking for a customer. The principle of limited trust therefore applies to those directing inquiries, especially online, bypassing direct contact, by proxy, or by other questionable means. I have encountered in my work such obvious attempts to deceive leasing companies that they were verifiable from simply accessing the interested party's website, which looked as if it had been created for the purposes of an illegal procedure (fictitious information and customers, photos downloaded from the Internet intended to show the real appearance of board members or the company's headquarters, etc.).
However, do not forget about rule no. 2 - being an exception to the first - namely - "Opportunity makes the thief (here: the crook)". This means that also in a properly functioning lease, leasing fraud can occur for various reasons - especially when the initial stage of the lease was only a form of putting people to sleep, building trust and financial history. At training sessions, I discuss fraud cases in which, for example, the lessee decided to commit fraud after several years of correct cooperation, only when a crisis arose. And this is just another
rule no. 3 - "The propensity to cheat increases during a crisis." - The principle made itself known again in 2020 (the coronavirus pandemic), when the shift to remote working (as well as the reluctance of many employees in the peri-leasing industry to interact in person, including activities at leasing) presented new opportunities for fraudsters, many of whom took advantage of them.
What are some examples of leasing fraud? [PL = object of lease]. Below is a list of selected types of leasing fraud (nomenclature).
On the legal side, leasing fraud (depending on the type) can 'fall' under a wide variety of criminal laws. Below is an excerpt of the most common.
Recipe | Excerpt from the recipe | Example | Comment |
Article 284 of the Criminal Code [Misappropriation] | § 1. Whoever appropriates another's movable property or property right shall be punished with imprisonment for up to 3 years. § 2. Whoever appropriates a movable property entrusted to him, is punishable by imprisonment from 3 months to 5 years. | Arbitrary sale of the leased property by the lessee. Concealment of leased property for sale. | The basic and most common provision in leasing offenses. A classic and a nightmare for leasing companies. |
Article 286 of the Criminal Code [Fraud]. | Whoever, for the purpose of financial gain, leads another person to an unfavorable disposition of his own or another person's property by means of misrepresentation or exploitation of a mistake or incapacity to grasp the intended action, shall be subject to a penalty of deprivation of liberty from 6 months to 8 years. | Concealment in the leasing application of the actual financial situation in order to defraud a non-compliant entity. Failure to actually conduct the activity for which the lease is intended. | Fraud, at least in part, occurs with most leasing scams, due to the cover-up of the actual financial situation. It is more difficult to prove due to the fact that it is a so-called "directional crime" (requires proof of the perpetrator's intent). |
Article 270 of the Criminal Code [Material falsehood] | § 1. Whoever, for the purpose of use as authentic, counterfeits or forges a document or uses such document as authentic, shall be subject to a fine, restriction of freedom or imprisonment for a term of 3 months to 5 years. | Falsification of a certificate of non-default from the US/US, a contract, other documents. | Accompanying crime, is incidental to the crime of misappropriation, fraud. |
Article 272 of the Criminal Code [Extortion of falsehood]. | Whoever extorts an untruth by deceitfully misleading a public official or other person authorized to issue a document, is punishable by imprisonment for up to three years. | A situation similar to the one above. | A situation similar to the one above. |
Article 273 of the Criminal Code [Use of false statements]. | Whoever uses a document specified in Article 271 or 272 shall be subject to a fine, restriction of freedom or imprisonment for up to 2 years. | A situation similar to the one above. | A situation similar to the one above. |
Article 300 of the Criminal Code [Failure to satisfy creditor's claims]. | § 1. Whoever, in the event of threatened insolvency or bankruptcy, frustrates or depletes the satisfaction of his creditor by removing, concealing, disposing of, donating, destroying, actually or ostensibly encumbering or damaging his assets, is punishable by imprisonment for up to three years. | The debtor gifts an apartment to a third party; establishes a sham mortgage for a business acquaintance; hides valuable assets. | A common situation on recovery after a lease fracas. |
Article 301 of the Criminal Code [Apparent bankruptcy] | § 1. Whoever, being indebted to several creditors, prevents or restricts the satisfaction of their claims by the fact that he creates, based on the provisions of the law, a new business entity and transfers his assets to it, shall be subject to the penalty of deprivation of liberty from 3 months to 5 years. § 2. The same penalty shall be imposed on anyone who, being indebted to several creditors, brings about his bankruptcy or insolvency in a reckless manner, in particular by squandering components of his assets, incurring liabilities or entering into transactions that are obviously contrary to the principles of economy, | The debtor creates a new company to which he transfers assets / assigns receivables from contracts. Debtor flips assets to new company. The debtor takes valuable assets out of the debtor's company in order to make it bankrupt. | A common situation on recovery after a leasing fracas. Option 2 often occurs on nationwide mass frauds, in which the victims are often many different entities of the financial industry |
The general rule is PROVENANCE. What is forgotten, especially by new companies on the market (without a rich long-term know-how In the industry)? About training your employees on leasing fraud mechanisms, dangerous behavior alerts, etc. Why is this important? Because: (1) staff turnover in the leasing industry has been and continues to be considerable; (2) leasing in Poland continues to grow at a high rate, resulting in a shortage of specialists in the market and the need to recruit them from other industries and further educate and adapt them to work in leasing. Such individuals, therefore, do not have many years of experience in fraud in the financial sector, especially in leasing, which have their own individual characteristics. Companies also start operations before developing well thought-out, even "fraud-proof" documents related to operations, especially such as terms and conditions / contract / OWL. They also do not introduce complinace systems. On top of that, the market expects simple, short, accessible and friendly documents. These loopholes are being exploited by fraudsters.
The defensive measures used depend on the particular types of fraud. When it is too late for prevention - what counts is the prompt and active representation of the wronged company in both civil and criminal cases, including the skillful use of existing lease collateral, or the use of collateral in civil proceedings. In the case of insolvent entities - quick decision-making and dynamic response to the actions of the debtor is what gives the chance to minimize losses and even still make money on a seemingly lost transaction.
I conduct trainings and seminars on the subject of leasing fraud and its prevention. Trainings are held in both direct and Online (MS Teams / Skype for Business). The principals are leasing companies, insurers and financiers of the leasing industry. Participants are employees of teams - sales, operations, risk monitoring, legal, control, audit, relationship maintenance, etc., as well as managers and executives. The trainings are part of the compliance system that should be in place at every leasing company. Their purpose is to broaden knowledge on the subject of leasing fraud, increase awareness, sensitize to signals of potential criminal activities, enhance crime prevention skills, etc.
In training sessions, I discuss, among other things:
In order to obtain a training offer and a training plan please feel free to contact me. I will also provide references and portfolio upon request.
HERE you can see sample leasing training plan.