Tuesday,
April 26, 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
The National Consumer Protection Week (NCPW)
Conference is a yearly Bank-sponsored symposium
for consumer
professionals, including bankers and community-based
organizations in New England to discuss recent
developments in consumer laws, policies, and
practices. The goal of this year’s conference
was to heighten public awareness of significant
developments
in the U.S. payments system and evolving fraud
schemes perpetrated over the internet and through
the traditional mail box. The conference focused
on three topics: 1) Check 21 vs. electronic check
conversion 2) Stored value cards and 3) Phishing
and other fraudulent schemes.
The collaborative partners of NCPW are the Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, Massachusetts Attorney General’s
Office, Massachusetts Consumer’s Coalition,
and Consumer World.
Panel I
Check 21 vs.
Electronic Check Conversion:
The Case of the Substitute Check and the Disappearing
Check
“What Are
They Doing To My Check?” 
Michael T. Stewart and Carol S. Lewis, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
When
Is Your Check Not a Check? 
Panel II
Stored Value
Cards:
Not Credit, Not Debit. What Are They?
“Stored Value
Cards:
Not Credit, Not Debit, What Are They?” 
Sherrie L.W. Rhine, Federal Reserve
Bank of New York
Outline of
Regulation E 
Diane L. Lawton, Massachusetts Office
of the Attorney General
Panel III
Phishing and
Fraud
“U.S. Postal Inspectors...The Tradition
Continues” 
Jean M. Zaniewski, United States Postal Inspection
Services
When
Internet Scam Artists Go "Phishing" 
How to Avoid Being Lured into Giving out Personal Information
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