logo
Freight fraud everywhere, but Truckstop CEO asks: Is anybody going to jail?

Freight fraud everywhere, but Truckstop CEO asks: Is anybody going to jail?

Yahoo15-04-2025

SAN ANTONIO – In the midst of an industry meeting of freight brokers who talked about freight fraud at every opportunity, Kendra Tucker made an interesting observation: She knows of no fraud perpetrators who ever found themselves in handcuffs.
'What I get a lot of are anecdotes from our customers about how cargo was stolen, the lengths to which people are going to steal it,' Tucker, the CEO of Truckstop, said in an interview at the company's booth on the exhibition floor of the Capital Ideas Conference of the Transportation Intermediaries Association. 'What you don't hear are stories about how this was punished.'
And to make that happen, Tucker said, there will need to be a concerted effort on the part of the industry across companies and associations.
'I think it has to do with the issue not rising to the level of enough people as a group being hurt for the right dollar amount to get the FBI to really look at it and try to help us,' she added.
Truckstop, known primarily for its freight-matching loadboard, has made being out in front of the fraud issue one of the most industry-facing strategies the company has undertaken. But Tucker suggested the company can't do it alone.
The TIA itself talks about the issue regularly, and President Chris Burroughs, who rose to the top position last year, made it the core subject in his first address to the organization's biggest conference.
But Tucker said the fight against fraud needs to be more collaborative. 'I was talking with TIA about this, and there really is an opportunity for brokers, carriers and shippers, who are all impacted by this, to come together with people like us and other key players in the industry, to decide how we want to approach it within the industry, so that we can have a cohesive approach to it,' she said.
Such a step would involve bringing in the Department of Transportation and other government agencies to 'put some teeth on this.'
And that gets back to how she opened the conversation: 'The reason fraud continues is because it isn't being prosecuted.'
In conjunction with the TIA meeting, Truckstop released a report of a recent survey it did on the top issues facing the industry. According to the company, the top issue identified by brokers was 'finding a carrier you can trust.'
Fraud is not new. But there is a consensus in the industry that it has exploded in recent years.
Tucker, who became CEO in April 2022 but who joined Truckstop in August 2020, said her discussions with Truckstop customers have been consistent in saying that the fraud of the past few years most definitely is more pervasive than it was several years ago.
But she said there is a parallel: what the industry went through during the great recession. 'That seems to track right where we're in, where we've been in a down cycle or down market that you see fraud really ticking up,' Tucker said.
The difference this time from 2008 and 2009 is technology, she said.
Two years ago at the TIA meeting, the buzzword was double brokering. It's a practice that can be legitimate if it is simply legal rebrokering: A broker assigns a load to a carrier who then reassigns it to another. There are instances in which that is acceptable under the terms of a contract. But beyond those situations, it can involve theft, late deliveries and service that violates the terms of a broker's agreement with a shipper, and a small loss on the cargo is a much lesser problem than cleaning up the mess afterward.
But at the San Antonio TIA meeting, the conversation was about fraud in general.
Tucker said the latest developments cover a wide range of categories: various digital activity, phishing emails, 'the actual stealing of freight at the docks and in the warehouses,' and the trafficking in legitimate motor carrier numbers bought from an owner willing to part with it for several thousand dollars.
'I think there have been so many technological advances since the great recession that fraud has been able to proliferate differently than it might have,' she said.
Technology tools are available to the industry as well, Tucker said, 'but you have to think one step ahead of the fraudsters because for the nefarious actors, as soon as we find ways to prevent a certain type of fraud that's happening, new ways pop up.'
The scam of fraudsters purchasing legitimate motor carrier authorities, usually from an unwitting seller, has become a big problem, Tucker said.
As Tucker described it, the legitimate MC might have a clean record attached to it. But then if the MC number is not being actively used, the owner might stumble upon a Facebook page or other social media channel set up specifically for a scam artist to buy an MC.
'The pages say, 'We'll buy your MC for $15,000 or even $50,000,'' Tucker said. 'It is very active.'
She noted that while there are more sophisticated tools that fraudsters can use rather than paying an unwitting seller for an MC, the purchase of a legitimate MC to pursue illegitimate ends relies on the seller being 'not educated enough and protective enough of their personal information.'
When the scam hits, she said, the illegitimate activity will be tied to that MC number, with potentially long-lasting consequences for the person who sold it. 'Why would you sell your identity for any amount of money?' Tucker said.
But here's the irony: For all the focus on fraud, the survey also found that it had declined in the past year. Tucker said Truckstop's own customers reported a 57% reduction in fraud between last year and this year.
'I'm not saying that fraud has gone away,' she said. 'I'm saying that for a good chunk of our customers, it is not at the peak that it was in '24 so that's very good.'
Truckstop's own data is that last year, it blocked almost 13,000 entities that were trying to get on to the Truckstop load board but flunked the company's identity verification.
That verification includes needing to present a driver's license as a basic first-step test. Beyond that, Tucker said, there is a multifactor authentication that includes a review by the company's 'security and assurance team.' Over recent years, Tucker said, that team has blocked more than 70,000 entities trying to get on to the loadboard as a broker, carrier or shipper from making it on to Truckstop's platform.
'We've got an actual team of humans; some of our highest tenured staff at Truckstop work on that team,' Tucker said.
That enables them to address head-on the survey's biggest concern about a broker being able to trust the carrier that it hired. 'Our customers tell us consistently that they've never gotten a fraudulent carrier from us,' Tucker said. 'So nothing is 100% sure, of course, but very consistently, we get really positive feedback from our customers about how much they trust us.'
More articles by John Kingston
Breaking from the FreightTech AI pack: Companies make their case at TIA meeting
New Mack long-haul truck makes grand entrance in bid for market share
ATBS says independent drivers earned a little more in '24 but drove more as well
The post Freight fraud everywhere, but Truckstop CEO asks: Is anybody going to jail? appeared first on FreightWaves.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Truck Parking Club doubles network in under 6 months
Truck Parking Club doubles network in under 6 months

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Truck Parking Club doubles network in under 6 months

Chattanooga, Tennessee-based Truck Parking Club recently announced it has surpassed 2,000 property member locations nationwide, a doubling of its footprint in six months. Part of the growth came from targeting diverse property types, from trucking companies and repair shops to storage facilities and real estate investors. 'This isn't just about hitting a number – it's about solving a decades-old problem that costs the trucking industry billions annually,' said Evan Shelley, co-founder and CEO of Truck Parking Club, in a press release. 'Every new location means drivers spend less time searching and more time earning. Our goal is clear: reduce parking search time to under 10 minutes per day.' The rapid expansion and milestone followed an announcement in February of the addition of industry veteran Brent Hutto as chief relationship officer, the position he formerly held at Truckstop. Part of the push is to build on driver momentum and turn it into enterprise-level relationships. Reed Loustalot, chief marketing officer at Truck Parking Club, said in an earlier interview with FreightWaves, 'Truck Parking Club grew organically and doing that we coincidentally have drivers in 60 of the top 100 fleets booking parking with us, and we have never talked to the fleets directly about having their drivers use our app. It's their drivers, their dispatchers and their fleet managers finding us.' Another advantage of being a truck parking aggregator is it's less expensive and turns otherwise unused parking locations into income production opportunities. Shelley wrote, 'New truck parking construction typically costs $100,000-$200,000 per space and takes years to complete, while Truck Parking Club can activate existing spaces within a day.' Looking ahead to the next milestone, the company is setting its sights on 10,000 locations. The Logistics Managers' Index's recently released May data showed a second consecutive month of expansion. The May LMI came in at 59.4 points, up 0.6 points from 58.8 in April. The m/m increase was impacted by inventories, which saw higher costs and slower movement compared to earlier in the year. The LMI is a diffusion index, with a score above 50 signaling expansion, while below 50 is a contraction. The interplay between warehousing costs and inventory levels was a big theme in May. Warehouse capacity fell 5.4 points in May to 50, while warehousing prices rose 0.2 points to 72.1, a strong expansion. 'This suggests that the inventories that were rushed into the country earlier this year are now static and holding them is expensive,' noted the report. The LMI transportation metrics were mostly stale, with movement less than 1 point. There were some nuances, according to the report. Capacity dipped slightly to 54.7, with upstream firms facing tighter space at 50 points compared to downstream firms' expansion of 65.3 points. Transportation prices rose more for downstream (66.7) than upstream (61.7), but the gap wasn't significant. Transportation utilization fell to 52.6 points, the lowest since November 2023. Despite lower diesel prices ($3.487 a gallon), a predicted import surge could stress intermodal and over-the-road networks, testing supply chain flexibility. On the import front, prognostications for an import boom similarly seen during COVID remain cloudy, due in part to American consumers having less cash than during the stimulus-fueled buying binge. The report adds that it was demand-driven, while the current surge in imports during Q1 was more supply-driven, as shippers tried to pull goods forward to avoid higher costs. 'Even though costs were high, there was a sense that they could grow higher in the future. Today, after several rounds of start-and-stop tariffs, shippers may doubt that the highest levels of threatened tariffs will ever come to pass. At the same time, costs are higher on imports from essentially every country than they were a year ago,' added the report. The post Truck Parking Club doubles network in under 6 months appeared first on FreightWaves.

Is Alijah Vera-Tucker a Fit for Giants?
Is Alijah Vera-Tucker a Fit for Giants?

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Is Alijah Vera-Tucker a Fit for Giants?

Is Alijah Vera-Tucker a Fit for Giants? originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The New York Giants didn't make the biggest splash of the offseason, but that doesn't mean they weren't bold. General manager Joe Schoen gambled when he returned 10 starters on the conference's worst offense. Switching out Daniel Jones for quarterback Russell Wilson is a massive upgrade, and first-round passer Jaxson Dart might be even better in due time. But the two will be throwing to an average receiving corps with a fringe-average running game and an offensive line that collapsed in 2024. Advertisement Left tackle Andrew Thomas is back and healthy, which is the biggest piece of the offensive line returning to form. For the first six weeks of last season, it was a promising unit. Still, banking on left guard Jon Runyan, center John Michael Schmitz, and right guard Greg Van Roten to improve is a risky proposition. Subsequently, the Giants were listed as a trade candidate for high-profile New York Jets offensive lineman Alijah Vera-Tucker by Pro Football and Sports Network. 'The Jets have a roster full of talented players nearing the end of their contracts,' Brandon Austin wrote. 'New general manager Darren Mougey must make tough decisions about which young standouts to extend and which to let go. And among those with trade potential, Vera-Tucker stands out as a viable candidate. 'After two injury-shortened seasons, Vera-Tucker finally stayed healthy in 2024 and performed well, allowing a 1.74% pressure rate. Still, he logged fewer than 450 snaps in each of the two previous years, so reliability could be a concern. Advertisement 'The Jets also can't pay everyone, so they'll need to decide how valuable Vera-Tucker is because he could command decent trade value.' New York's cap situation is fairly healthy, and while it does have a host of young stars entering the extension phase of their rookie contracts, a strong piece in the trenches may be more likely to get paid than, say, running back Breece Hall. With how much the Jets have invested up front, keeping Vera-Tucker around makes sense, making any trade unlikely. However, if the Giants were to trade for him, he would have a significant impact on the current offensive line. His ability to play either guard or tackle spot makes him valuable, as he could move around in the event that Thomas or Jermaine Eluemunor goes down, insulating the unit from poor second-string play. Further, he'd likely push Van Roten to center, demoting Schmitz and thus patching up a liability up front. Advertisement New York isn't in position to trade for a one-year rental, and the Jets probably aren't entertaining calls. But if Schoen has a late-offseason trick up his sleeve, the Giants stand to upgrade. Related: Schoen's Offseason Strategy Underlines Giants' Offense Related: Continuity Key to Giants' Potential Climb in NFC East OL Rankings This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 4, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store