Banks to arm machines with ink bombs to stain stolen notes

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Published: Thursday September 12, 2013 MYT 12:00:00 AM
Updated: Thursday September 12, 2013 MYT 9:06:50 AM

Banks to arm machines with ink bombs to stain stolen notes


BY NEVILLE SPYKERMAN
[email protected]

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PETALING JAYA: Thieves who rob automated teller machines will be left with worthless pieces of paper if a Bank Negara proposal is put into place. Dye bombs are to be placed in the ATMs and if anyone tampers with the machines, the “bomb” goes off, leaving the notes stained in red and easily recognisable as stolen money.

Bank Negara, in its guidelines on Dye-Stained Banknotes dated Aug 26, is calling on both banks and Cash in Transit Companies to consider using the currency protection device (CPD) to deter ATM theft.

Local security company Extro Code Sdn Bhd demonstrated yesterday a CPD or dye pack which is already available in the market.

Its technical director Mohd Zaki Sulaiman said that once installed, the dye pack would be triggered when someone tries to break into the ATM.

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“The device is like a smoke bomb which releases the ink onto the stacks of banknotes in the ATM,” he said.

Mohd Zaki said there’s no actual explosion but there is some heat when the CPD is triggered.

“The actual triggering mechanism is a trade secret,” he added.

He said the ink called Disperse Red 9 was not harmful.

He said the ink was imported but the actual CPD was developed and produced locally.

Mohd Zaki declined to reveal the cost of each dye pack and the installation cost.

“Who pays for the device will depend on Bank Negara and the banks,” he said.

He said there are four ATM providers in the country but installing the dye-packs in the different machines should not be a problem.

The Bank Negara guidelines state that the CPD would emit a bright coloured dye by smoke, liquid or any other agent to stain the currency in the event ATMs are broken into.

This will enable authorities and the public to easily identify the defaced stolen currency and render them unfit for use.

The guidelines also sets out conditions under which these banknotes will be replaced.

Among them:

> The ink has to be indelible by water, fuel, gas, bleach and detergent.

> It must be traceable to the ATM, to assist police investigations.

> It must stain at least 10% of each bank note.

> It can be detected and rejected by banknotes authentication machines used by banks such as Cash Deposit Machines.

> It must be non-hazardous and non-toxic.

If banks retrieved the dye-stained currency, they can submit the banknotes to the central bank for assessment.

Tellers will also be trained to detect these banknotes.

The public and retailers will be advised not to accept dye-stained banknotes as they are likely to be stolen.

These measure, Bank Negara believes, will reduce ATM robberies.

In the United States, banks have dye bombs in vaults and any unauthorised person who tries to remove any money will trigger the bomb, leaving all the money – and the robber – stained in ink.

 

Published: Thursday September 12, 2013 MYT 12:00:00 AM
Updated: Thursday September 12, 2013 MYT 10:00:12 AM

9,000 machines nationwide to have CPD

BY MARTIN CARVALHO
[email protected]

PETALING JAYA: Some 9,000 automated teller machines nationwide are to be equipped with a currency protection device (CPD) to discourage thieves from carting off ATMs.

The CPD will emit a bright coloured dye to permanently stain banknotes in the event that an ATM is “attacked”. The stain can be easily seen with the naked eye, and what is needed is consumer education before the system is implemented.

This is among the initiatives that 27 financial institutions are proposing to beef up security following more than 45 cases of ATM tampering so far this year alone.

According to a financial industry source, the CPD is just one of the measures that the Association of Banks Malaysia (ABM) is looking at.

“It is one of several proposals which bankers are looking at to find a holistic approach to improve the security of ATMs,” said the source, who did not want to be identified.

He added that feedback would be required from bankers, customers and the public before the system could be implemented.

The source said that similar security measures had proven successful in the United States, Europe and Australia where ATM thefts had been widely prevalent in the mid-1990s to the turn of the millennium.

“Dye technology in the US led to the recovery of US$20mil (RM65.4mil), and resulted in over 2,500 arrests in 2005,” he added.

 
Another stupid idea created to make money for the Malays. If this was working, it would have been used in the developed countries.
 
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