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OPINION

The Prepaid Phone Trafficking Web of Crime

Cell phone trafficking operations siphon millions of dollars from the wireless industry and its customers every year. Until recently, little could be done to fight back, but a vigorous counter-attack that has yielded several victories in federal courts across the country is beginning to turn the tide and help the wireless industry put a stop to a spreading epidemic.

Cell phone traffickers have created a complex network of individuals and companies in the U.S. and around the world that steal subsidies from wireless companies used to lower the cost of their phones for legitimate customers. Traffickers divert subsidized phones by hacking into their proprietary software, and then resell the phones at a substantial profit in the U.S. and in other countries where they can be used on other wireless networks.

Ultimately, the losses from this theft are passed along to American consumers and businesses in the form of higher prices for wireless phones and service. Although there is no industry-wide data on precise loss figures, based on investigations and litigation it appears that traffickers divert several million handsets from various wireless providers in the United States each year.

How It Works

Although there does not appear to be a single entity orchestrating all of the worldwide trafficking, the networks of traffickers identified thus far appear to share common structural elements. The schemes involve groups of “runners” who purchase prepaid mobile phones at deep discounts from major retail outlets. A runner’s “full-time job” is traveling from store to store, buying the maximum allowable number of phones and then moving on to the next store.

Runners quickly resell the phones they buy to middlemen, or resellers, who remove the phones from their original packaging and prepare them for resale. First, the phones’ proprietary software is hacked in order to allow the phones to operate on a network other than the one for which they were intended. Often, this process occurs in foreign countries with cheap labor prices and lax enforcement of intellectual property laws. Then, the hacked or unlocked phones are repackaged or “re-kitted” for resale.

The “re-kitting” process involves placement of the phones in new — often counterfeit — packaging along with a charger that operates on the target country’s electrical system, counterfeit batteries, instruction manuals, warranties and other materials, all of which is intended to deceive the consumer into believing he is buying a brand new phone. The unsuspecting consumer who ultimately buys the phone in the U.S., or in Ecuador or Malaysia, likely has no idea that his phone was originally sold at a Wal-Mart or Target store in Dallas or Los Angeles.

The Real Victims

In addition to lost subsidy investment suffered by the American phone service providers and their legitimate consumers who are harmed by the losses that are ultimately passed along to them in the form of higher rates, the consumers who buy the hacked phones are deceived into buying inferior products. The phones were not designed or manufactured for use on their local networks, and the hackers often damage the phones’ software as they stumble through the process of trying to unlock and reprogram the handsets to work on other carriers’ networks.

The counterfeit warranties are generally not valid, and the manufacturers either absorb the cost of fixing the damage caused by the hacker or refuse to fix phones that do not work properly because of the tampering. Consumers in this country also suffer because traffickers often buy up all the prepaid wireless phones in a store, leaving none for legitimate customers to buy.

Fighting Back

TracFone Wireless, which has been a frequent target for phone traffickers, is taking action to stop the theft.

In 2006, TracFone began an aggressive campaign of investigating runners, middlemen, unlockers and others involved in phone trafficking and began filing lawsuits. Since that time, TracFone has filed more than 40 cases against nearly 150 separate defendants in federal courts in seven different federal districts in Texas, Georgia, California, Florida, Michigan and New York.

TracFone’s lawsuits have so far resulted in more than 20 stipulated permanent injunctions and final judgments finding the traffickers’ conduct illegal and prohibiting them from ever again buying, selling, unlocking or transshipping TracFone and Net10 wireless phones. TracFone has also been awarded millions of dollars in damages.

Other major wireless service providers have also taken aggressive action to shut down trafficking. AT&T, T-Mobile, IDT and Virgin Mobile have all filed similar lawsuits, and are succeeding in getting courts to enter injunctions and award damages. In addition, wireless handset manufacturers Nokia and Motorola have also filed lawsuits against traffickers, focusing on their use of counterfeit packaging and components.

All of the wireless providers are constantly looking out for additional targets for litigation, and many more lawsuits will be filed in the coming weeks and months. The industry wants the perpetrators to know that they are all being pursued.

Uncharted Territory

The industry also is working closely with law enforcement authorities to pursue and prosecute traffickers. The first trafficker to plead guilty to a crime associated with prepaid wireless phone trafficking is scheduled to be sentenced on Aug. 22 in Houston. In May, Muhammad “Mubi” Mubashir pleaded guilty to criminal contempt of court before Judge Melinda Harmon of the Southern District of Texas for violating the court’s injunction prohibiting him from trafficking in prepaid mobile phones.

In deposition testimony and documents produced to TracFone, Mubashir admitted trafficking more than 9,000 TracFone wireless phones, resulting in a loss of more than US$1.4 million to the company. Harmon is expected to sentence Mubashir to prison time and require payment of restitution to the affected wireless companies. The Mubashir conviction represents an important milestone in the pursuit of phone traffickers, and additional criminal prosecutions are expected to be forthcoming in various parts of the country.

TracFone has set up an online tip service and a toll-free phone line to report suspicious activity. If you know anyone engaged in prepaid phone trafficking, if anyone solicits you to become involved in trafficking, if anyone tries to get you to become a runner or if you see anything suspicious, please contact TracFone anytime at (866) 806-1838 or [email protected].


James B. Baldinger is an attorney and shareholder in the law firm of Carlton Fields who represents TracFone Wireless. He previously served as vice president of business security for AT&T Wireless Services.

1 Comment

  • In my opinion, the victims of the lawsuits are the customers as well as the parties being sued. Many of them can not even afford good lawyers or are elderly. I do not feel the the entire truth has been told. No one except for the lawyers seem to believe that a crime has taken place. My heart goes out to the victims of these law suits.

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