- Chargeback assistance fraud occurs when a fake recovery service collects upfront fees to file chargebacks or recover fraud losses and delivers nothing.
- Asian fraud victims are primary targets having already lost money to an initial fraud, they are approached by fake recovery operators who exploit desperation and unfamiliarity with legitimate recovery processes.
- Claims for fraudulent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment are available against fake chargeback service operators in all major EU jurisdictions.
- The EAPO freezes a fraudster’s accounts across all EU member states simultaneously chargeback assistance fraud fees are collected and moved rapidly.
- Limitation periods run from the date of discovery victims of double fraud must act on both the original fraud and the recovery scam simultaneously.
Chargeback assistance fraud recovery is achievable through civil litigation, asset tracing, and criminal proceedings in European courts. Where a fraudulent operator presented themselves as a legitimate chargeback service, fund recovery specialist, or legal representative collected upfront fees from a fraud victim on the promise of recovering their losses and delivered no genuine service, claims for fraudulent misrepresentation, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment are available in all major EU jurisdictions. Personal liability claims against named operators survive corporate dissolution. The European Account Preservation Order (EAPO) can freeze the fraudster’s accounts across all EU member states simultaneously. Recovery outcomes depend on the total fees paid, the identifiability of the operator, the quality of documentation, and the speed of action after discovery.
What Is Chargeback Assistance Fraud?
Chargeback assistance fraud also referred to as recovery scam fraud or fake fund recovery fraud is a secondary fraud that specifically targets individuals who have already been defrauded. The fraudster presents as a legitimate chargeback service, fraud recovery specialist, legal firm, or regulatory representative who can recover the victim’s lost funds in exchange for an upfront fee, a percentage of the expected recovery, or a series of progressive payments framed as necessary steps in the recovery process.
No genuine recovery service is provided. The upfront fees are misappropriated. Where the victim pays initial fees, successive further payments are solicited each framed as an essential cost of completing the recovery until the victim refuses to pay or identifies the fraud. In documented cases, victims have paid chargeback assistance fraud operators amounts exceeding their original losses.
Chargeback assistance fraud is specifically designed to exploit fraud victims at their most vulnerable emotionally distressed, financially damaged, and actively seeking a solution. The fraudster’s knowledge of the victim’s original loss sometimes obtained from criminal databases of fraud victim contact details lends apparent legitimacy to the approach.
How Chargeback Assistance Fraud Operates
Unsolicited Contact After an Initial Fraud
The fraudster contacts the victim shortly after the original fraud by email, phone, social media, or messaging application demonstrating apparent knowledge of the victim’s loss. The contact is presented as coming from a regulatory authority, a specialist recovery firm, a law enforcement unit, or a financial institution that has identified the fraudster. The victim, distressed and seeking resolution, is receptive to the approach. An upfront fee framed as a registration charge, processing fee, legal retainer, or compliance deposit is requested before recovery work begins.
Fake Law Firms and Recovery Specialists
The fraudulent operator presents as a law firm, legal advisory, or specialist fraud recovery service with a professional website, fabricated case references, and invented testimonials from previous clients. The website may use the name and branding of a real European law firm or recovery specialist operating as a clone or impersonator. Legal service fees are collected. No genuine legal work is performed. The operator becomes uncontactable after collecting sufficient fees.
Percentage-Based Recovery Promises
The fraudster promises to recover the victim’s full losses in exchange for a percentage fee payable upfront as a deposit or success fee advance. The promise of full recovery is false. The percentage fee is collected. No recovery is initiated. In more sophisticated variants, the fraudster provides fabricated progress reports case updates, court filing confirmations, regulatory correspondence to maintain the victim’s belief that genuine recovery work is in progress while further fees are collected.
Progressive Fee Escalation
The fraudster collects an initial fee, then presents successive additional costs legal filing fees, court deposits, compliance charges, tax clearance payments, release fees each framed as a necessary next step before the recovered funds can be released to the victim. Each payment reinforces the victim’s prior investment in the process. The total fees collected frequently exceed the victim’s original loss before the fraud is identified.
Regulatory Authority Impersonation
A fraudster presents as a representative of a European financial regulator BaFin, AMF, Consob, or the European Banking Authority informing the victim that their original fraud case has been identified and that a recovery fund has been established. A processing fee or administrative charge is required to access the recovery fund. No such fund exists. The regulatory identity is fabricated. This variant combines chargeback assistance fraud with regulatory impersonation both addressed in this article and in the impersonation scam article in this series.
How to Identify Chargeback Assistance Fraud
Red Flags Before Paying Any Recovery Service
- Unsolicited contact: A legitimate recovery service does not contact fraud victims unsolicited. Any approach from an unknown party offering to recover your losses by email, phone, social media, or messaging platform should be treated as a fraud risk until independently verified
- Upfront fees before any recovery: Legitimate legal representatives and chargeback services do not require substantial upfront payments before any recovery work is performed. A service that requires fees before demonstrating any genuine recovery activity is not operating legitimately
- Guaranteed recovery promises: No legitimate legal service can guarantee recovery outcomes. Any service that guarantees the return of specific amounts or promises 100% recovery is misrepresenting the nature of legal and chargeback proceedings
- Requests for card details or banking credentials: A legitimate recovery service never requires the victim’s card details, banking credentials, or online account access as part of the recovery process
- Pressure to act immediately: Urgency pressure the offer expires today, your recovery window closes this week is inconsistent with legitimate legal and recovery practice and is a direct indicator of fraud
- Unverifiable credentials: A legitimate law firm or recovery specialist is registered with the relevant professional body in their jurisdiction. Verify registration independently not through links or contact details provided by the service itself
Legal Framework: How Chargeback Assistance Fraud Is Actionable
Fraudulent Misrepresentation
A chargeback assistance fraud operator who presented false credentials, false recovery capabilities, and false promises of recovery to induce upfront fee payments has committed fraudulent misrepresentation in all EU jurisdictions. Each false representation the fabricated firm identity, the false recovery guarantee, the fabricated progress reports constitutes a separate misrepresentation. Claims entitle the victim to rescission of any agreement and full recovery of all fees paid, plus consequential damages including any additional losses sustained by the victim as a result of delayed pursuit of genuine recovery options.
Breach of Contract
Where the chargeback assistance fraud operator entered into a written engagement agreement specifying the recovery services to be provided and provided no genuine services, breach of contract claims are available for all fees paid. These claims do not require proof of fraudulent intent the service was either provided or it was not. Breach of contract claims carry longer limitation periods in several jurisdictions notably Portugal (20 years) and are available in parallel with misrepresentation claims.
Unjust Enrichment
Where the fraudulent operator received fees without providing the contracted recovery services, unjust enrichment claims are available independently of the contractual position including where the original engagement agreement is void because the operator misrepresented their identity or professional credentials.
Regulatory Complaints for Unauthorised Legal Practice
Where the chargeback assistance fraud operator presented as a law firm or legal representative without holding genuine legal authorisation in the relevant jurisdiction, complaints can be filed with the relevant national bar association or legal regulatory body in Germany, the
Rechtsanwaltskammer; in France, the
Barreau; in Spain, the
Colegio de Abogados; in Italy, the
Ordine degli Avvocati. Unauthorised practice of law is a criminal offence in all EU member states and creates additional criminal exposure for the operator beyond standard fraud charges.
Personal Liability Against Named Operators
Where the fraudulent recovery service was operated through a company, named directors who directed or authorised the fraud carry personal liability in all major EU jurisdictions surviving corporate dissolution. Asset tracing can identify personal holdings available for recovery independently of the company’s solvency.
Immediate Steps After Identifying Chargeback Assistance Fraud
Step 1 – Stop All Payments Immediately
Make no further payments to the fraudulent operator under any framing including payments described as the final step before fund release, a compliance deposit, or a tax clearance charge. Any continued payment provides the operator with additional extraction opportunity. The progressive fee escalation pattern is specifically designed to extract maximum value from the moment of realisation fraudulent operators apply maximum pressure at the point when the victim begins to question the process.
Step 2 – Initiate Chargeback or Recall for Fees Paid
For fees paid by credit or debit card, initiate a chargeback claim immediately within 120 days of each transaction date. For fees paid by bank transfer, request immediate recall through your bank. For cryptocurrency fee payments, engage a specialist blockchain forensics provider. Payment recovery for chargeback assistance fraud fees operates through the same mechanisms as any other fraud payment the fastest available path depends on the payment method used for the fee.
Step 3 – Preserve All Evidence
Save every communication from the fraudulent operator emails, messages, contracts, invoices, progress reports, and any documentation of professional credentials or case updates provided. Preserve all payment records for fees paid. This evidence is required for both the chargeback or recall process and civil and criminal proceedings.
Step 4 – File a Criminal Complaint
File a criminal complaint with the national cybercrime or financial crime unit in the EU member state where the fraudulent operator is registered or where the receiving account is held. Where the operator presented as a law firm, file a complaint simultaneously with the relevant bar association. Criminal complaints access company registration records, payment processor account data, and website hosting records the primary tools for identifying operators who presented under fabricated professional identities.
Step 5 – Pursue Genuine Recovery
Identify legitimate recovery options for both the original fraud loss and the chargeback assistance fraud fees through independent legal advice, genuine regulatory complaints, and established civil proceedings. The chargeback assistance fraud has caused delay in pursuing genuine recovery of the original loss assessing whether the original fraud’s limitation periods remain open is an immediate priority.
Legal Options for Chargeback Assistance Fraud Victims
Civil Litigation
Civil proceedings against the identified fraudulent operator for fraudulent misrepresentation, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment are available in all EU jurisdictions. Civil proceedings achieve full recovery of all fees paid, compensatory damages for losses caused by delayed pursuit of genuine recovery options, EAPO asset freezes, and disclosure orders compelling banks, payment processors, and company registries to produce operator identity and transaction records.
Asset Tracing and the EAPO
Chargeback assistance fraud fees collected from multiple victims simultaneously follow traceable paths through EU banking systems. Forensic accounting and civil disclosure tools can trace fund movements and identify assets acquired with misappropriated fees. The
EAPO under Regulation (EU) No. 655/2014 freezes accounts across all EU member states simultaneously on an
ex parte basis essential where operators collecting from multiple victims hold significant accumulated proceeds.
Regulatory Complaints
Complaints to national bar associations for unauthorised legal practice, to national financial regulators for fraudulent financial service representations, and to national consumer protection authorities create enforcement records and trigger supervisory investigation. Regulatory findings may result in operator takedown, domain seizure, and in some jurisdictions compensation proceedings for identified victims.
Criminal Proceedings
Chargeback assistance fraud constitutes criminal fraud and where legal practice was impersonated criminal impersonation of a regulated professional in all EU member states. Criminal complaints unlock company registration records, payment processor account data, website hosting records, and cross-border judicial cooperation that are unavailable in civil proceedings alone.
Factors That Determine Recovery Outcomes
Total Fees Paid and Payment Methods Used
Higher total fee payments justify more extensive recovery proceedings. Card payments offer chargeback mechanisms the fastest available recovery path. Bank transfer fees require recall or civil proceedings. Cryptocurrency fee payments require blockchain forensics. Cases involving multiple payment methods require parallel recovery strategies across each channel simultaneously.
Speed of Action After Discovery
Chargeback windows close at 120 days from each transaction date. Bank recall success rates are highest when initiated within hours of discovery. Criminal complaints initiated promptly access fresher forensic evidence company registration records, payment processor logs, and website hosting data that may be updated or deleted as the fraudulent operator moves on after identification.
Identifiability of the Operator
Named operators with personal assets in EU jurisdictions are the most viable civil defendants. Where the fraudulent service presented under a fabricated law firm identity, criminal investigation accessing company registration records, domain registrar data, and payment processor account holder information is the primary identification tool. Clone and impersonation operations additionally generate claims against the impersonated firm’s insurers in some circumstances.