SunTrust's
Project to Stop Duplicate Check
Processing
October 6, 2005
American Banker
Following
are excerpts taken from the October
6, 2005 edition of American
Banker.
SunTrust Banks Inc. is installing
software designed to keep it from
processing the same check twice.
As banks convert more checks into
digital images, the risk of checks
being posted twice rises. This can
happen in several ways. The check
might accidentally be submitted after
the image is sent. Also, many images
are printed out as image replacement
documents, because the paying bank
cannot receive images. Sometimes
both the check and its IRD are processed,
but more frequently, according to
the Federal Reserve Board, the IRD
is printed twice.
In any case, the result is the same:
Customer accounts are debited multiple
times.
Lee Crocker, a senior vice president
at SunTrust, one of the first companies
to start exchanging images, said
it has not had to deal with a lot
of duplicate IRDs. The efforts to
prevent them are "a proactive
stance on our part," he said. "We
would like to think we are ahead
of the curve."
However, the Atlanta banking company
is aware of the potential for trouble,
and it believes the issue merits
attention from banks, Mr. Crocker
said. "If there's 100 a day
or one a day, that's more than we
want."
Double-posting was an issue even
before the advent of imaging. For
example, a jammed check sorter could
sometimes result in a paper check's
magnetic ink character recognition
data being read twice. But the issue
has become increasingly nettlesome
since the Check Clearing for the
21st Century Act made IRDs a legal
replacement for original paper checks
last year.
SunTrust said it plans to use the
Payment/Guard software from the Dallas
vendor Carreker Corp. to look for
multiple IRDs by yearend, Mr. Crocker
said.
The next step in the installation
will be spotting cases where both
the check and its IRD have been processed.
Eventually the software will also
be able to look for checks that have
been converted to other types of
payments, such as an automated clearing
house payment.
Rod Springhetti, a senior director
of product management at Carreker,
said the problem of processing a
check twice has been small until
now, in part because many banks have
been converting only high-value checks
into IRDs. These checks tend to receive
closer scrutiny than low-value ones,
and a double posting would probably
trigger other security measures.
Mr. Crocker said the customer-service
stakes are higher today than they used
to be. In the past a bank could catch
a duplicate and reverse the charge
before sending a customer's statement
at the end of the month, but fraud-wary
customers can now check their accounts
daily over the Internet, so banks have
less time to correct a duplicate charge. |