The Top 10 Most Forged ID Documents (2022)
Learn about the fraud trends of 2022 and how to protect your business in 2023.
Learn about the fraud trends of 2022 and how to protect your business in 2023.
Over the past year, Sumsub has analyzed half a million fraud attempts and narrowed down the 10 most commonly-forged documents. These include Vietnamese and Bangladeshi ID cards, as well as US driving licenses.
Check out this article to learn more about document forgery and penalties for it in different countries. You can also download Sumsub’s latest Fraud Report to learn about our fraud forecast for 2023.
Forgery is a criminal act in which a person falsifies or fabricates documents, or other objects,with intention to deceive and make profit.
Document forgery includes:
Forged documents can include photo substitution, data alteration, change in visas, or ID numbers, etc.
The most “popular” types of forgery include:
The spread of electronic documents has spurred forgery using photoshop and deepfakes. Digital manipulation has been on the rise in recent years, but the good news is that there is a choice of software solutions to keep you safe.
Suggested read: Liveness Detection: Choosing a Solution that Won’t Let Fraudsters in
A fake document is a fabricated document (physical or electronic) which misrepresents a person’s identity, residency, finances, or employment, or otherwise misrepresents the document’s source, authenticity, or accuracy.
A forged document can be:
Suggested read: Document Verification
Based on our data more than 50% of all fraud detected worldwide is attributed to 5 countries:
We recommend adding these potentially risky locations and document types to your list of red flags and paying extra attention to documents from these jurisdictions.
Fraudsters fake documents from certain countries depending on existing loopholes, document security levels, and how often fraud occurs in a given jurisdiction.
Low document security. According to our report, half of the most forged documents were national ID cards. In some countries, these documents have fewer security features—watermarks, holograms, stamps—than documents intended for international travel, which makes them easier to forge.
For instance, India’s electronic ID card, the Aadhaar, can simply be printed out on paper. The document has almost no security features, except for a QR code. But, if a business’ verification system can’t read QR codes, it can easily miss a forged document.
Legal loopholes. Laws in some countries contain loopholes that allow criminals to forge documents without facing legal consequences. For instance, Article 327 of the Russian Criminal Code states that forgery or manufacture of any official document for the purpose of its use or sale is illegal. However, according to one of our in-house experts, there’s a loophole: if it can’t be proven that the forger planned to use or sell the fake documents, they cannot be prosecuted. Criminals use this loophole to falsify documents with impunity, and firms that forge documents operate in broad daylight.
Low privacy-awareness among citizens. Sensitivity around personal data privacy varies around the globe. In Europe, there’s a strict data protection regulation called the GDPR, and 67% of the EU citizens are aware of it.But the situation drastically changes in other parts of the word. Only half of the 54 countries in Africa have introduced data protection laws, leaving countless Africans helpless in the event of a data breach. In the absence of proper personal data protection rules, citizens are at greater risk of leaking their personal information onto suspicious websites that sell data on the darkweb.
Forgery is considered a crime in all countries, but penalties vary from one country to another.
In the United States, for example, forgery is considered a federal crime in all states. The United States Code defines forgery as: “anyone, with intent to defraud, who falsely makes, forges, counterfeits, or alters any obligation or other security of the United States is guilty of a federal offense.” Forgery in the US is punishable by different penalties, depending on the state, including up to 5 years in prison, a fine of up to $25K, probation, and restitution (compensating the victim for money or goods stolen as a result of the forgery).
In the UK, according to Act 1 of the Forgery and Counterfeiting Act of 1981 the offense of forgery is defined as: “a person is guilty of forgery if he makes a false instrument, with the intention that he or another shall use it to induce somebody to accept it as genuine, and by reason of so accepting it to do or not to do some act to his own or any other person’s prejudice.” Penalties include fines, up to ten years in prison or both, depending on the offense, and types of documents forged.
In Germany, the crime of forgery is defined in Section 267 of the Criminal Code as “Whosoever for the purpose of deception in legal commerce produces a counterfeit document, falsifies a genuine document or uses a counterfeit or a falsified document shall be liable to imprisonment not exceeding five years or a fine.” In Germany even an attempt to forge a document is also punishable. The German Criminal Code specifies imprisonment sentences up to ten years, depending on the seriousness of the crime.
It’s critical to introduce a reliable document screening system that checks document security features and detects signs of graphic editing. Since some national documents have few security features and other weaknesses, businesses should add additional layers of protection:
Behavioral risk score uses device fingerprint analysis to track suspicious IP addresses and email domains, usage of VPN, and location mismatches.
Duplicate and blocklist search detects applicants that try to reuse data belonging to existing users. This stops fraudsters in their tracks by checking them against databases of banned persons.
Facial biometrics analyzes the facial features of an applicant to ensure that the true holder of the documents undergoes verification.
Check our Sumsub’s Fraud Report 2022 to make sure your business is safeguarded from fraud in 2023:
A forged document is either a made-up fabricated document, or a real document (physical or electronic) which contains altered information to make it appear genuine. Forged documents can include photo substitution, data alteration, etc.
n 2022, the most forged documents are: Vietnamese ID card Bangladeshi ID card Pakistani ID card See the rest of the most forged documents in our Fraud Report 2022.
In 2022, the most forged document is the Vietnamese ID card.
The most efficient way is to use special document verification software.
A fake ID is a fabricated ID document used to create a false identity.
The three most common fake IDs are borrowed IDs, manufactured fake IDs, and forged IDs.
Although fraudsters are becoming more creative and use various means to trick KYC systems, a modern and sophisticated KYC solution can detect all kinds of fraud and, therefore, fake IDs.