New measures aim to 'break the spell' of fraudsters
New measures aim to 'break the spell' of  financial fraudsters by giving payment providers more time, according to draft legislation  published by the government.
Until now, payment service providers such as  banks have generally been required to process payments by the end of the  following business day, giving a limited timeline to investigate and alert  relevant parties to possible fraud.
The draft legislation will give payment  service providers a further 72 hours to investigate payments, but only where  there are reasonable grounds to suspect fraud or dishonesty. The legislation  has been designed to minimise any impact on legitimate payments.
The UK has seen an increase in authorised push  payment fraud over the past few years – in 2022 victims lost £485 million to  these scams.
Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Bim  Afolami, said:
'Fraudsters spin whole webs of lies and  fabricate all sorts of things to convince people to send them money – this  legislation will give banks, other payment service providers and law  enforcement more time to get in touch with victims and break the fraudster's  spell before money is sent.
'The government is absolutely committed to  tackling fraud and recognises the impact of this devastating crime on victims –  this legislation is another tool in our arsenal to fight fraud.'
Internet  link: HM Treasury press release