A
proactive approach that will benefit your entire community.
With Sherlock Ink's®
easy inkless fingerprint system your entire community will be able to take part in controlling
crimes of fraud and forgery. Banks and businesses will reduce their fraud
losses, and consumers will no longer have to absorb the cost of those losses.
Individuals' identities and credit can be protected, and law enforcement authorities can more successfully
prosecute individuals involved in fraud.
Call
SHERLOCK INK® at
303-841-1648
Touch-Print
Crime Prevention Initiative. Beginning Nov., 2000, any
checks accepted for fraud or forgery prosecution must have a readable
Touch Print. Implementation of a Touch Print program is inexpensive,
quick and easy. Colorado Springs Police Department.
Fingerprints
on checks could help preventing fraud. It may be one
extra
step for customers, but officials believe people trying to use fake or
stolen
checks
will think twice before leaving their prints on someone else's checks.
Danielle Nieves, Colorado Springs Gazette.
Man's
quest to clear name leads to use of inkless pads -
Aurora
puts fingerprint devices in patrol cars
One man's quest to clear
his name of a crime he didn't commit has prompted police officials to stock
inkless fingerprint pads in patrol cars. "It sure would have saved me a
lot of problems," said Larry Robinson of Colorado Springs.
Michael O'Keeffe; Rocky
Mountain News.
Touch
signature program cuts losses in half
"The program has been
a very effective deterrent. We have seen unprecedented reduction in counterfeit
losses of more than 95 percent since the Touch Signature program began,"
says Jerry Griebling, Investigator, Colorado National Bank Fraud and Security
Department;
Colorado Edition.
Grocers
ask customers' fingerprints
"Grocery store officials
say the system is a clean painless process. It's designed to help retailers
reduce the millions in bad check costs they have to write off each year."
Jerd Smith; Rocky Mountain
News.
Police
touch on idea for identification -
Aurora
unit using fingerprinting pads
"We're trying to prevent
people from being victimized by crime, said Aurora Police Sergeant Tom
Boyle. All this could have been prevented if the TOUCH ID system had been
in place."
Marilyn Robinson; Denver
Post.
Business
shops give fraud the finger -
local
businesses say fingerprints on checks chase away deadbeats
"Banks were reporting
enormous success rates- their reductions in losses ran 50 to 75 percent-
so we brainstormed ways to get them into other places. Grocery stores,
hardware stores, liquor stores- virtually anybody who runs a business can
implement TOUCH ID."
Ernest Luning; Aurora
Sentiniel.
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