1. What Credit Card Fraud Is and How It Is Charged
Credit card fraud is not a single offense but a set of overlapping crimes. A disputed purchase can be a minor matter, or the starting point of a federal case involving access devices, identity theft, and wire fraud. How it is charged depends on the facts.
The gap between a state theft charge and a federal fraud indictment is large, so early classification matters. These cases sit at the intersection of criminal defense and financial regulation, often handled within white collar crime practice.
Can Credit Card Fraud Be a Federal Crime?
Yes, credit card fraud is frequently charged federally as access device fraud under 18 U.S.C. Section 1029. An "access device" includes a card, account number, code, or PIN used to obtain money, goods, services, or a transfer of funds, so the law reaches far beyond a physical stolen card.
Section 1029 covers a range of conduct, and penalties can be severe:
| Conduct | Example |
|---|---|
| Using an unauthorized access device | Charging a stolen card number |
| Possessing 15+ counterfeit or unauthorized devices | Holding many card numbers |
| Trafficking in access devices | Buying or selling card data |
| Possessing device-making equipment | Skimmers or cloning tools |
These cases are often investigated by agencies such as the Secret Service, and a single indictment can combine several counts.
) What Makes a Credit Card Fraud Case Federal Instead of State?
A case is more likely to become federal when it crosses state lines, uses digital networks, or involves banks and identity information. Small, local, single-card conduct is often handled by state prosecutors, while broader activity draws federal charges.
Common federal triggers include:
- Interstate or online transactions, including e-commerce and payment apps.
- Multiple access devices or trafficking in card data.
- Banks or card issuers as targets, supporting bank fraud.
- Identity information or coordinated, multi-person schemes.
Because federal exposure is generally more serious, how a case is classified early can shape the entire defense.
2. Intent, Identity Theft, and Sentencing Exposure
The factors that most affect a credit card fraud case are whether there was intent to defraud, whether someone's identity was used, and how prosecutors calculate the scale of the offense. Each can change the charges and the sentence. Each is also where defenses often live.
Understanding these drivers early shapes the entire strategy. Small facts can carry large consequences.
Can I Be Charged If I Did Not Intend to Commit Fraud?
Intent to defraud is central, so consent, authorization, and honest mistake can be important defenses. Whether you stole a card, borrowed it with permission, were an authorized user, or misunderstood a transaction can determine whether a crime occurred at all.
Key facts that shape a defense include:
- Consent or authorized-user status, and any spending limits.
- Communications with the cardholder about permission.
- Billing, shipping, IP, and device data showing who acted.
- A genuine dispute or error, rather than deception.
These distinctions separate a criminal case from a civil chargeback dispute, and they are central to any federal and state fraud defense.
How Do Identity Theft and Sentencing Factors Raise the Stakes?
Using another person's identity can add serious charges, and the scale of the alleged loss drives the sentence. If the fraud used someone's name, account number, or login credentials, prosecutors may add aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. Section 1028A, which can carry an additional, consecutive prison term.
Federal exposure can also depend on the charge, the loss amount, the number of access devices, identity-theft counts, prior record, restitution, forfeiture, and whether prosecutors allege a broader scheme, conspiracy, or attempt. Online activity through email, apps, or payment gateways can support wire fraud, and identity-related counts carry their own identity theft penalties.
3. Unauthorized Charges and Related Civil Disputes
Not everyone dealing with credit card fraud is accused; some are cardholders facing unauthorized charges or merchants facing chargebacks. These civil issues run alongside the criminal side and have their own deadlines. Timing is often the most urgent part.
These consumer and merchant rights run on strict timelines. Missing them can forfeit protection.
Am I Responsible for Unauthorized Charges, and How Do I Dispute Them?
Your liability for unauthorized credit card use is generally limited by federal law, often to no more than a small capped amount. To protect that limit, you should report the fraud to your card issuer promptly and follow the written dispute process.
The billing-error procedure has firm deadlines:
- Notify the issuer in writing, generally within 60 days of the statement.
- The issuer must acknowledge the dispute, usually within 30 days.
- It must investigate and resolve it within set time limits.
If an issuer denies a valid fraud claim, the denial can be reviewed against these rules and the cardholder's liability limits, drawing on consumer protection law, and fraudulent entries on a credit report may require disputes under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.
What Can Merchants Do about Chargeback Fraud?
Merchants facing chargeback fraud need strong evidence to contest disputed transactions. When a customer claims a legitimate purchase was unauthorized, the merchant must show the charge was valid.
Useful records include delivery confirmation, customer communications, fraud-screening data, and a documented chargeback response, which is central to chargeback fraud defense. Keeping this evidence organized in advance makes disputes far easier to win, whether the claim is honest confusion or deliberate "friendly fraud."
4. Evidence, Defense Strategy, and Getting Help
For someone accused, the outcome usually turns on evidence, intent, and timing. The same digital records that build a prosecution can also support a defense. Preserving and analyzing them early is critical.
Strong cases are built on documents, not assumptions. The details decide the result.
What Evidence Do Prosecutors Use in Credit Card Fraud Cases?
Prosecutors rely heavily on digital and documentary evidence to show who authorized a transaction. The defense uses the same records to challenge intent, identity, and authorization.
Key evidence often includes:
- Transaction and account records, and card-use locations.
- IP logs, device data, and login history for online cases.
- Shipping, delivery, and pickup records.
- Messages, receipts, and surveillance, often obtained by subpoena or search warrant.
Because this evidence can be lost or overwritten, and because a motion to suppress may challenge how it was obtained, it should be reviewed early.
When Should I Contact a Credit Card Fraud Lawyer?
Contact a lawyer before speaking with investigators, responding to a subpoena, turning over devices, accepting a plea offer, or trying to explain a transaction on your own. Early review can protect your statements, digital evidence, restitution issues, and defense options.
A lawyer can assess intent, access device and identity theft
exposure, loss and sentencing factors, and whether charges can be reduced or dismissed, coordinating a criminal defense strategy. Because anything you say or hand over early can be difficult to undo, getting advice before you respond is far safer than waiting.
5. Credit Card Fraud Questions Answered for the Accused
People under investigation or charged with credit card fraud often have urgent questions. These quick answers cover federal charges, intent, identity theft, investigator contact, and whether charges can be reduced.
Can Credit Card Fraud Be a Federal Crime?
Yes. Credit card fraud is often charged federally as access device fraud under 18 U.S.C. Section 1029, which covers using or possessing unauthorized or counterfeit cards, card numbers, or account access. It can also lead to wire fraud, bank fraud, or identity theft charges, especially in online or multi-card cases.
Can I Be Charged If I Did Not Intend to Commit Fraud?
Intent to defraud is a key element, so lack of knowledge, consent, or authorized-user status can be important defenses. Whether you had permission, believed you were authorized, or made an honest mistake can determine whether a crime occurred. These facts often separate a criminal case from a civil billing dispute.
Can Credit Card Fraud Lead to Identity Theft Charges?
Yes. If the fraud used another person's name, account number, or login credentials, prosecutors may add aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. Section 1028A, which can carry an additional, consecutive prison term on top of the underlying fraud charge. This significantly increases the potential exposure.
What Should I Do If Investigators Contact Me about Credit Card Fraud?
Do not try to explain the transaction on your own, and contact a lawyer before answering questions or turning over devices. Statements to investigators and items you hand over can be difficult to undo, so early legal advice helps protect your rights, your digital evidence, and your defense options.
Can Credit Card Fraud Charges Be Reduced or Dismissed?
Sometimes. Outcomes depend on the evidence, intent, loss amount, prior record, and how the evidence was obtained. Weak proof of intent, authorization issues, identity questions, or an improper search can support reducing or dismissing charges, though results vary by case, jurisdiction, and the specific facts.
Am I Responsible for Unauthorized Charges on My Card?
Usually not beyond a small amount. Federal law generally limits a cardholder's liability for unauthorized use, often to a capped amount, if you report the fraud promptly. Notify your issuer, dispute the charges in writing, and follow the billing-error process to protect your rights.
04 Dec, 2025

