logo
Check Call: TIA's annual fraud report spotlights surge in incidents

Check Call: TIA's annual fraud report spotlights surge in incidents

Yahoo13-05-2025
The Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA) has released its April 2025 'State of Fraud in the Industry' report, revealing a significant surge in freight fraud incidents that are impacting 3PLs and freight brokers nationwide. From Sept. 1, 2024, through Feb. 28, 2025, there were 1,611 fraud reports filed across seven key categories — an increase of 65% from the prior eight-month reporting period.
Key findings:
Truckload freight as primary target: An overwhelming 97% of respondents identified truckload freight as the mode most susceptible to fraud.
Prevalence of unlawful brokerage: Unlawful brokerage schemes, in which fraudsters impersonate legitimate brokers to misappropriate loads or payments, were cited by 34% of respondents as the most common fraud tactic encountered.
Multiple fraud types experienced: Some 83% of respondents reported encountering at least three different types of fraud within the past six months.
Widespread geographic impact: Fraud incidents have been reported across nearly every region, with Texas, California, South Carolina and Washington identified as top states where fraudulent activities originated.
Financial strain on small businesses: About 22% of respondents reported losses exceeding $200,000 due to fraud in the past six months, while 10% have invested over $200,000 in fraud prevention measures.
Chris Burroughs, TIA president and CEO, emphasized the severity of the situation: 'Our members are on the front lines of this crisis, and when fraud hits, they need to act fast.'
TIA has also released a Post-Fraud Incident Checklist. Burroughs said, 'This checklist gives 3PLs and freight brokers a clear, tactical guide they can turn to in the heat of the moment — and we believe it's going to make a real difference.'
The report highlights the evolution of fraud tactics, including:
Identity theft and spoofing: Fraudsters are increasingly using identity theft and spoofing techniques, with 42% of respondents citing these as common fraud experiences.
Compromised communications: There has been a steady increase in impersonation attempts, unauthorized contact changes and bad actors attempting to gain access to broker networks.
The report also delivers a strong message to policymakers: Now is the time for coordinated action. TIA is urging the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to crack down on fraudulent carriers and remove illegitimate listings from its databases. The association is also calling on Congress to pass the Household Goods Shipping Consumer Protection Act and the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, which would provide additional tools for law enforcement to investigate and prosecute this crime.
For a comprehensive understanding of the findings and recommendations, access the full TIA fraud report here.
Market Check. Dallas sees more than just the FreightWaves Freight Fraud Symposium this week, as outbound tender rejections have fallen 1.23% week over week. Rejections are sitting at 4.82% in this relatively stable freight market. Volatility comes when rejections are at or above 7% for many weeks, which was seen throughout April in Dallas.
With rejection rates lowering, brokers and shippers can expect stronger contract carrier compliance. Secondary carriers will see less award volumes and freight coming out of Dallas. Brokers can take their time when it comes to prioritizing coverage for lanes. Spot rates continue to leave a lot to be desired as rejections fall, meaning the rates from April will be on the high side when bidding for freight.
Who's with whom. After months of escalating tensions and economic uncertainty, a welcome pause has arrived in the U.S.-China tariff standoff. The two global powers have agreed to a 90-day suspension of most tariffs that have been in place since April 2, offering a reprieve and an opportunity for further negotiations over the next three months.
As part of the agreement, both nations will begin rolling back many of the reciprocal tariffs that have defined the trade dispute. U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods will fall from 145% to 30%, and China's tariffs on U.S. goods will fall back to 10%. These lower tariff rates are set to take effect Wednesday, signaling the first tangible sign of de-escalation in what has been a prolonged trade battle.
Beyond tariff reductions, the deal addresses key nontariff barriers. Beijing has committed to suspending or canceling several retaliatory measures, including export restrictions and the blacklisting of dozens of U.S. companies. This is seen as a significant move to rebuild trust and open dialogue between the two economies.
One of the most critical components of the new agreement centers on intellectual property rights. Article 1.1 of the agreement reaffirms both nations' commitment to respecting IP rights, while Article 1.2 mandates the fair, adequate, and effective protection and enforcement of those rights. It also guarantees equitable market access to companies whose businesses depend on robust IP protections.
The agreement comes at a pivotal time. Just last month, concerns were raised as certain Chinese manufacturers began promoting luxury goods at significantly reduced prices, raising red flags about potential IP violations. This temporary trade truce may help curb those practices and ensure a more level playing field.
For U.S. retailers and importers facing an average transit time of about 20 days for goods traveling from Chinese ports to the U.S. West Coast, this window allows companies to pull forward inventory or restock products that may have run low during the high-tariff period.
The more you know
Highway releases Freight Fraud Index revealing 400,000 sophisticated fraud attempts in Q1 2025
CEVA Logistics acquires Turkish logistics company Borusan Tedarik
XPO sees minimal shipper conversion from LTL to TL
Taking on Porter, Uber launches logistics service Courier XL for delivery of large goods
Logistics firm buys $2M in Trump meme coins to boost US-Mexico trade
The post Check Call: TIA's annual fraud report spotlights surge in incidents appeared first on FreightWaves.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cargo thieves are plundering America blind — Congress must act
Cargo thieves are plundering America blind — Congress must act

The Hill

time6 days ago

  • The Hill

Cargo thieves are plundering America blind — Congress must act

As Americans gear up for fireworks and barbecues today, another group is making plans of a different kind: cargo thieves. Every year, the days are Independence Day see a notable spike in criminal networks seizing shipments of everything from televisions to energy drinks to vital medical supplies, exploiting the disruptions and reduced oversight that come with the holiday rush. It's all part of a growing cargo theft epidemic. Once a sporadic nuisance, it has metastasized into a nationwide criminal enterprise that is bleeding the U.S. supply chain to the tune of more than $35 billion each year. And everyday Americans are the ones footing the bill. These thieves aren't just smashing locks in the dead of night. Sophisticated criminal rings are exploiting weaknesses in our digital infrastructure, using ever-evolving cyber fraud and identity theft to impersonate legitimate carriers and hijack loads without ever touching a crowbar — often rerouting freight before it even leaves the warehouse. Others target trucks and trailers at rest stops and distribution centers, threatening the personal safety of drivers who are simply doing their jobs. The consequences ripple far beyond the loss of goods. Small trucking companies face higher insurance premiums or go out of business. Retailers, already navigating global supply chain headaches, must absorb delayed deliveries and inventory losses. Consumers see price hikes and empty shelves. And for drivers — often the last line of defense — the stress of constant vigilance becomes a daily burden. Cyber-enabled 'strategic theft' is now one of the most insidious and fastest-growing methods of committing cargo crime. When coupled with virtually nonexistent enforcement, it's a low-risk, very high-reward proposition for these bad actors. Just one in ten thefts ends in an arrest. That is why Congress must act and pass the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, a bipartisan bill that would finally give federal authorities the legal framework, resources and cross-agency coordination needed to take this crisis seriously. It is a badly overdue step toward unified national enforcement. This bill would create a federal task force with the investigative authority to deter these criminal rings. Just as importantly, local law enforcement should be trained and equipped to recognize and respond to cargo theft. Federal funding should support multi-jurisdictional investigations. We also need better data. Unlike other forms of crime, cargo theft is severely underreported and inconsistently tracked. The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act establishes a national cargo theft database — comprehensive, centralized and transparent — which would be a powerful tool for law enforcement and industry stakeholders alike. As it stands, we're likely severely underreporting the true scale of the economic damage. The numbers we do know are concerning. The average value of each cargo theft is more than $200,000, and according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, there's been a 1,500 percent increase in cargo theft incidents since 2021. Total cargo theft losses increased by 27 percent in 2024 and are projected to rise another 22 percent in 2025. The FBI and Department of Homeland Security have flagged this as a growing national threat — but the theft epidemic rages on, because the real failure is one of enforcement. The penalties for cargo theft are weak. Investigations are rare. Prosecutions are slower than a backed-up port. Cargo thieves must face penalties that reflect the scale of their crimes — not pocket change that comes with a slap on the wrist. Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) recently said it well: 'Eliminating cargo theft will require an 'all-hands-on-deck' approach that involves Congress, federal agencies, local law enforcement, and the private sector.' That all-hands-on-deck approach would have helped Adam Blanchard, CEO of Texas-based Tanager Logistics. As he told members of Congress in February, thieves brokered loads under his company's name, deceiving both shippers and carriers. They then stole truckloads of Red Bull, diverting them to suspicious warehouses in California and ostensibly shipping them out of the country. When Blanchard turned to insurance companies, local law enforcement and federal agencies — FBI, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, even the Department of Homeland Security — he was met with a wall of indifference and red tape. This is the same bureaucracy that claims to protect our borders and secure our economy yet can't address this rampant fraud. It's unacceptable. Put bluntly: cargo theft threatens our national security, weakens our economy and brazenly defies law enforcement. Truckers are being targeted, businesses are suffering and the costs are borne by consumers. The trucking industry has shown its resiliency time and again — through pandemics, natural disasters and economic shocks. We take great pride in delivering America's freight safely and on time to keep our economy running. But we cannot fight organized cargo crime without the full support and partnership of our federal government. By passing the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, Congress can send a clear message: We will not stand by while criminal syndicates hijack our supply chain — we will hunt them down, shut them down and protect the backbone of American commerce. Chris Spear is the president and CEO of the American Trucking Associations.

Joby delivers first aircraft to Dubai as air taxi service nears launch
Joby delivers first aircraft to Dubai as air taxi service nears launch

The Verge

time30-06-2025

  • The Verge

Joby delivers first aircraft to Dubai as air taxi service nears launch

Joby Aviation is getting ready to take flight. The electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) company has delivered its first production aircraft to Dubai, where it plans to launch a commercial air taxi service in early 2026. Joby, which has successfully completed multiple flight tests with a pilot onboard, says it has begun in-market testing ahead of the anticipated launch of commercial operations. It's a significant milestone for Joby, which has been developing the technology to power its multi-rotor aircraft since 2009. And its a significant milestone for the fledgling air taxi sector, which has been leaning on hype and promises for the future of air travel to attract investors and potential clients while its aircraft trudge through years of safety testing and certification. Dubai is aiming to become a launchpad for advanced air mobility, granting Joby a six-year exclusive operating agreement last year. The agreement, signed at the World Governments Summit, provides Joby with regulatory and financial support from Dubai's Road and Transport Authority (RTA). The company has said it will begin operations from four planned vertiports, including Dubai International Airport and Palm Jumeirah. It's a significant milestone for Joby, which has been developing the technology to power its multi-rotor aircraft since 2009. In addition to the delivery in Dubai, Joby is also making progress here in the United States. The company is about to begin a process mandated by the Federal Aviation Administration called Type Inspection Authorization (TIA), in which the FAA sends its own pilots to test out Joby's aircraft. TIA signals the final stage of testing before commercial passenger operations can begin. 'In my view,' said Paul Sciarra, chair of Joby's board of directors, in an interview, 'this combination — both the beginnings of commercial service in a big international city, plus the real last lap of the certification program — I think are going to be the two things that gear shifts this in people's mind from, 'Gosh, this is awesome, like, when's it going to show up?' to 'Holy crap, it's happening tomorrow.'' In addition to test flights, the company plans on conducting a series of demonstration flights along the routes it plans on flying. Then it will shift to commercial trips by the end of this year or early next, he said. Sciarra also said the environmental conditions in Dubai present a unique challenge, with average temperatures usually around 110 degrees. Maintaining reliable air conditioning in the aircraft will be crucial for passenger comfort, he said. And there are a lot more 'boxes to check' before commercial flights can commence, including training on-the-ground mechanics and flight crews. 'I think we're getting ever closer to that moment when people are going to be able to go to a place and book a flight on this service, or see these aircraft flying over a place that they're familiar with,' Sciarra said. 'That's not years away. That's like months away at this point.' Joby's all-electric aircraft has six rotors and seats five, including the pilot. The vehicle can take off vertically, like a helicopter, and then shift into forward flight using tilt rotors. Joby says it can reach a top speed of 200mph, travel 150 miles on a single battery charge, and is 100 times quieter than a conventional aircraft. Its pouch-style lithium-ion batteries power the craft's six electric motors for at least 10,000 flight cycles, according to Joby's founder JoeBen Bevirt. Joby is also ramping up manufacturing, making it the first eVTOL maker to deliver multiple production aircraft. The company now has five aircraft in its test fleet, including a hybrid hydrogen-electric variant. A second aircraft was recently delivered to the US Air Force as part of its ongoing defense partnerships. Joby has received approximately $1 billion in outside investment, including $750 million from Toyota. Still, the company has struggled to meet financial expectations, reporting $0 in revenue in the first quarter of 2025. Joby is hoping Dubai will set the stage for its inevitable launch in the US, including key markets like New York, Los Angeles, and Florida. And as its manufacturing facility in Dayton, Ohio, starts churning out more aircraft, the company expects that it will really take flight. 'The broader external question,' Sciarra said, 'is how many markets can we credibly address in this near term?'

Memphis Powerhouses Wilfred Busby and Tyrone Burroughs to be Honored at St. Jude Spirit of the Dream
Memphis Powerhouses Wilfred Busby and Tyrone Burroughs to be Honored at St. Jude Spirit of the Dream

Business Wire

time25-06-2025

  • Business Wire

Memphis Powerhouses Wilfred Busby and Tyrone Burroughs to be Honored at St. Jude Spirit of the Dream

MEMPHIS, Tenn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The St. Jude Spirit of the Dream Gala presented by W&T Contracting Corporation, today announced that community leaders Wilfred Busby and Tyrone Burroughs will be honored with the Legacy Award and Spirit of the Dream Award at its annual dinner on Saturday, September 20. Now in its 10 th year, the Spirit of the Dream honors individuals whose lives and legacies reflect the founding vision of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital® that no child should die in the dawn of life, regardless of race, background, or financial status. LEGACY AWARD Recognizes a St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or ALSAC team member who demonstrates exemplary commitment to the legacy of St. Jude by encompassing the true spirit of caring for people. Wilfred Busby, Visionary People Leader and Culture Champion: Busby is the Senior Fellow of Employee Experience for ALSAC, the fundraising and awareness organization for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, where he is leading efforts to establish an Office of Executive Coaching and Leadership Assimilation. He is an expert in employee experience, having overseen teams working on recruitment, workforce planning, employee relations, and internal communications. With over 30 years of leadership experience at major companies including FedEx, ServiceMaster, APL Logistics, and Busby has deep expertise in executive leadership development, operations management, and organizational strategy. Busby received his Level II Certification in Executive Coaching and Leadership and holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Organizational Management from Crichton College and an Executive MBA from the University of Memphis. He is a graduate of the Leadership Memphis Executive Program, a certified Six Sigma Green Belt, and has mentored students through the Memphis Institute for Leadership Education (MILE) program at the University of Memphis. He led the Young Men's ministry at the Greater Pleasant Hill MB Church, focusing on life skills, job training, and youth development, and served on the Board of Directors for Green Dot Public Schools of Tennessee and the Board of LeMoyne-Owen College. His vision has shaped talent development and organizational culture at ALSAC and beyond. SPIRIT OF THE DREAM Honoring a person or institution embodying the lifesaving mission of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and its founder, Danny Thomas. Tyrone Burroughs, Visionary Entrepreneur, Transformational Leader, and Philanthropic Trailblazer: Burroughs is the founder, President, and CEO of global consumer products management firm First Choice Sales & Marketing Company. A dynamic entrepreneur and influential philanthropist, Burroughs has built a business empire rooted in innovation, empowerment and community impact. His influence spans industries and institutions from consumer goods to education, banking, and civic leadership. Beyond business, Burroughs is a dedicated civic leader and advocate for educational equity. His philanthropic contributions led to the renaming of the Tyrone Adam Burroughs School of Business and Entrepreneurship at Benedict College, honoring his commitment to empowering future generations of business leaders. He serves on numerous influential boards, including the St. Jude Memphis African American Engagement Council, the Memphis NAACP Branch Board of Directors, the Greater Memphis Chamber – Chairman's Circle, and the Board of Directors of the Federal Reserve Bank – Memphis Branch. He was a 2021 inductee in The Society of Entrepreneurs. Burroughs is widely celebrated for his ability to drive breakthrough results, foster inclusive economic opportunities, and inspire transformative changes across sectors. Guests will enjoy a special live performance by 10-time Grammy award-winning vocal group Take 6, along with a culinary experience curated by acclaimed Memphis-based chef Phillip Dewayne. Held during Sickle Cell Awareness Month and Children's Cancer Awareness Month, the gala will also spotlight pioneering research and treatment by St. Jude for sickle cell disease, a condition that disproportionately affects African Americans. Over the past decade, the St. Jude Spirit of the Dream Gala has honored Memphis luminaries such as artist Derek Fordjour, NBA coach Lionel Hollins, civic leader A.C. Wharton Jr., entrepreneur Carolyn Chism Hardy, and artist Peter Woods, each recognized for their contributions to equity, culture, and progress. Proceeds help ensure that families never receive a bill from St. Jude for treatment, travel, housing, or food — so they can focus on helping their child live. To purchase tickets, become a sponsor, or learn more, visit St. Jude Children's Research Hospital ® St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is leading the way the world understands, treats and defeats childhood cancer and other life-threatening diseases. Its purpose is clear: Finding cures. Saving children. ® It is the only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center devoted solely to children. When St. Jude opened in 1962, childhood cancer was largely considered incurable. Since then, St. Jude has helped push the overall survival rate from 20% to more than 80%, and it won't stop until no child dies from cancer. St. Jude shares the breakthroughs it makes to help doctors and researchers at local hospitals and cancer centers around the world improve the quality of treatment and care for even more children. Because of generous donors, families never receive a bill from St. Jude for treatment, travel, housing or food, so they can focus on helping their child live. Visit St. Jude Inspire to discover powerful St. Jude stories of hope, strength, love and kindness. Support the St. Jude mission by donating at liking St. Jude on Facebook, following St. Jude on X, Instagram, LinkedIn and TikTok, and subscribing to its YouTube channel.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store