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Old Jul 29, 2014, 10:15 am
FlyerTalk Forums Expert How-Tos and Guides
Last edit by: Prospero
This thread is dedicated to issues around American Airlines Corporate Security, AAdvantage Fraud division (AKA "Revenue Protection Unit"), and its enforcement of the AAdvantage Terms and Conditions - particularly to selling, buying and bartering awards, miles, upgrades and other instruments - and related issues.

It is okay at this time to gift awards, upgrades, etc. as long as there is absolutely no quid pro quo (no buying or selling or offer to do so, no barter or trade "you give me one now I'll give it back" or anything smacking of prohibited activity. AA is probably the strictest of the US airlines about this. They have a very active and expert AAdvantage Fraud division of the AA Corporate Fraud department, and they can both be aggressive and, some might say merciless - clawing back one's miles and instruments, even closing one's account and terminating status and ability to participate in the AAdvantage program n the future.

There are other ways to commit fraud in AA’s eyes, such as fictitious or fraudulent bookings to try to block seats to increase one’s chances if upgrades, generating tickets to access airside facilities (e.g. lounges) when there is no intent to fly, etc.

To read an example of how the US Department of Transportation has rules on punitive actions by AA, read Joel Hayes vs. American Airlines here (PDF).

Please read on for information and the consensus of knowledgeable members.

E.g. AAdvantage Terms and Conditions excerpt: "At no time may AAdvantage mileage credit or award tickets be purchased, sold, advertised for sale or bartered (including but not limited to transferring, gifting, or promising mileage credit or award tickets in exchange for support of a certain business, product or charity and/or participation in an auction, sweepstakes, raffle or contest). Any such mileage or tickets are void if transferred for cash or other consideration. Violators (including any passenger who uses a purchased or bartered award ticket) may be liable for damages and litigation costs, including American Airlines attorneys’ fees incurred in enforcing this rule." (This extends to other AA instruments such as Systemwide Upgrades, etc., selling of extra AirPass seats or baggage allowance, etc.)
Also see AAdvantage Program Terms and Conditions and

American Airlines Conditions of Carriage.

Originally Posted by SS255
<snip>"While you may consider the AAdvantage Miles in your account to be *your* property, they are actually the property of AA, and AA permits you to redeem them within the program rules set by AA. If AA detects any impropriety (real or perceived) in the use of AAdvantage miles, they reserve the right to confiscate the miles and/or close/delete the account."...
The typical email from AA Corporate Security can not be addressed by calling AAdvantage Customer Service or other methods - you must reply to the email address given. It likely will look like this:

My name is Fname Lname, and I am an analyst with American Airlines. One of my responsibilities is investigating possible instances of fraud, misrepresentation, and violations of the General AAdvantage Program Conditions. Today, I’m writing you about your AAdvantage account # XXXXXXXX

We have reason to believe that the transactions listed below violate one or more of the AAdvantage program conditions. This includes, but is not limited to, prohibition of purchase, sale, or barter of mileage credit and or award tickets. As a result, American Airlines has suspended your AAdvantage membership privileges and use of AA.com® in conjunction with your account – and may terminate your account as a result of our findings. We are in the process of completing the investigation into this matter, and I would like to hear the events as they occurred from your perspective. Please respond to this message by <date> with complete and accurate information regarding the activities listed below:

<specific activity /activities in question>

Required Information:·
  • Passenger name·
    • Origin and destination cities on the travel itinerary·
      • Purchaser name (individual, company and/or website), including:·
        • Copy of any advertisements to which you responded offering to purchase/broker the use of your AAdvantage miles·
          • Purchaser contact information, such as:·
            • Mailing address·
              • Email address·
                • Telephone number·
                  • Website profile name·
                    • Your statement fully disclosing the details surrounding the sale/barter transaction referenced above·
                      • Copy of all communication between yourself and the purchaser·
                        • Documentation that you received payment


To protect and retain the integrity of the AAdvantage program, it is vital that firm action be taken as a result of any violation of the AAdvantage Program Conditions, whether intentional or not. Failure to respond completely and accurately by <insert date>, will result in the termination of your AAdvantage membership and all its benefits, including all remaining AAdvantage miles in your account and any award tickets issued from it. Please, understand that our overall motivation is to preserve the benefits of the AAdvantage program, rather than to take punitive action against individuals. To that end, it’s not unusual for us to release the AAdvantage account suspension once we receive all the detail we request and reconcile it with the results of our investigation. We hope to hear from you soon.

Regards,

Fname Lname, etc.
Excellent summaries of information (based on the sum of experiences we have seen in this thread over time) of how to respond:

Blogger Gary Leff: "If you made that mistake and got caught, American usually will go light on first-time offenders provided that they ‘come clean’ and are forthcoming about whom a systemwide was sold to or purchased from and what the terms were. They are most interested in serial brokers and are willing to ‘plea bargain’ with minor offenders to get the Evip-lords. There may be a consequence but it should fall short of account shutdown and forfeiture of miles." Link
Originally Posted by sbrower
I am going to try and provide a summary of the advice. For the record, this is 90% from Jon (JonNYC) and a little bit from other comments and circumstances, I am just trying to provide an easy summary, without all the explanations and reasons. I am happy to have others update/correct.

1. Respond to the questions in the email which you received. Don't try to call or email that person, or anyone else, at AA or DOT or whatever. Just answer the email.

2. Answer every question, in detail, with the facts. Don't use sarcasm or "you should know" or anything else that sounds like to you are avoiding the exact question being asked.

3. Assume that they know more about the true facts than you do. It might not always be true, but in most cases they have way more information than you might assume. So go back to #2, above.

4. If you did ANYTHING that was wrong (not under your interpretation of what you think the rules should be, but based on what the rules actually say) then, if you want to continue to participate in the AAdvantage program, tell them about your error and tell them that you are prepared to pay a correct penalty for your mistake (miles/status/etc) and then go back to #2, above.
From JonNYC, our resident expert on this:

Originally Posted by JonNYC
Perfect and 100%.
<snip>

The analysts that do this for a living have the same reactions that any humans do to being lied to and/or condescended to. Therefore, as well as being 100% truthful, go out of your way NOT to be:

-condescending
-brusque
-sharp, terse and/or sounding like you're being inconvenienced
-insulting
-just generally slippery, aloof, evasive and unforthcoming. As mentioned; they know more than you think they do. Always.

DO be apologetic, contrite and extremely cooperative.

Finally, any version of "...in which case, I'll be emailing [insert name or department here] to tell them how I, a [insert years flying AA, status, MMer, $$ spent, etc] customer is being treated" and/or mention of your lawyer, DOT, Chris Elliot (), this forum, any blogger, etc. DO NOT DO THIS.
Older posts have been archived to the
archived thread.

A number of posts regarding AA's confiscation of 60,000 miles from "Mr. Hayes" for allegedly making "fictitious" bookings in search of whether his upgrade would be likely to progress or not, AA IT issues that might have led to this (or not), AA's replies and the USDOT complaint have been moved to a new thread: Hayes, USDOT and AA: "fictitious bookings" and checking upgrades.

NOTE: Posts about members experiencing account security breaches, fraud, theft of awards and instruments have moved to Account fraud / breach: my account compromised, awards stolen, etc..

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Account audit / blocked / fraud: award / miles / SWU / sale, barter, etc.

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Old Apr 1, 2019, 2:00 pm
  #886  
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Originally Posted by C17PSGR
And the practical advice is that if someone has hacked your account, AA may ask you to provide a police report. If they do, no reason to fight about it.

In many places, including Arizona, you can even file a simple report online

https://www.phoenix.gov/police/policereport/

And, in some cases, filing that report might actually allow the police to identify a theft. For example, if the police learn that multiple people in an apartment complex are having mileage or credit card hacks, they might identify mail theft as a possible issue.

The good thing about them is nobody does anything with them. Essentially you are writing your own report. They were created in response to just these reports we are talking about.
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Old Apr 1, 2019, 3:40 pm
  #887  
 
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On a very serious note, when is this thread going to revert to the very important issues it was meant to cover?

I keep checking back but nope, nothing...not at all.
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Old Apr 1, 2019, 5:38 pm
  #888  
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The thread was closed temporarily for some needed cleanup. As well, posts from 2016 have been moved the archive thread linked to in the Wikipost.


No further posts relating to the filing of a police report, please. It suffices that AA may require a police report, and that the how, where and acceptance of such can vary considerably by jurisdiction.

Now let’s get back on topic, please.

Moderator

Last edited by JDiver; Apr 1, 2019 at 5:54 pm
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Old Apr 1, 2019, 10:21 pm
  #889  
 
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Woohoo re-subscribed to the thread! LoL
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Old Apr 2, 2019, 9:37 am
  #890  
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Cases like the most recent OP-- AAcount breached, miles pulled by a hacker are growing very, very quickly. VERY quickly. And the backlog in clearing them grows as fast. You'll be seeing these reports on an absolutely regular basis from here on out.

Bad password hygiene is the cause in the majority of cases-- all the standard advice; do not reuse site-to-site (SO many people still do.) Hard to guess passwords-- nothing simple/reused/guessable. And change it up at intervals as well.
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Old Apr 2, 2019, 9:50 am
  #891  
 
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All,

Need some help regarding American Airlines here. Changed my password yesterday via aa.com, went online last night to check seats for tomorrow's flight...cannot log in. AA.com won't let me reset password and cannot log in.

Called AA today and was told that, 'An Analyst is looking at your account, however there are no notes here for me to help you.' I was told that I'd probably get an email in a day or so regarding what this was about.

WTH?

Anyone have any idea what's going on?

Thanks!
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Old Apr 2, 2019, 9:57 am
  #892  
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Originally Posted by SeanMTX
All,

Need some help regarding American Airlines here. Changed my password yesterday via aa.com, went online last night to check seats for tomorrow's flight...cannot log in. AA.com won't let me reset password and cannot log in.

Called AA today and was told that, 'An Analyst is looking at your account, however there are no notes here for me to help you.' I was told that I'd probably get an email in a day or so regarding what this was about.

WTH?

Anyone have any idea what's going on?

Thanks!
Well, you're in the right thread, so you probably know the kinds of things that they can suspect that can cause interest on the part of AA. If absolutely nothing comes to mind (or even if it does,) then only solution is to wait for the email from them which will detail the activity they deem suspicious and then see if that comports with your recollection of things. Certainly a chance it's just a misunderstanding of some type.
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Old Apr 2, 2019, 3:11 pm
  #893  
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Originally Posted by SeanMTX
All,

Need some help regarding American Airlines here. Changed my password yesterday via aa.com, went online last night to check seats for tomorrow's flight...cannot log in. AA.com won't let me reset password and cannot log in.

Called AA today and was told that, 'An Analyst is looking at your account, however there are no notes here for me to help you.' I was told that I'd probably get an email in a day or so regarding what this was about.

WTH?

Anyone have any idea what's going on?

Thanks!
When you -do- get the email (or in advance of same) be sure to study up on the basics of how to respond (and how not to respond) to AA in response to their assertions so as to avoid some of the basic mistakes that folks tend to make and thereby increase your chances of account recovery.
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Old Apr 20, 2019, 5:29 am
  #894  
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Originally Posted by SeanMTX
All,

Need some help regarding American Airlines here. Changed my password yesterday via aa.com, went online last night to check seats for tomorrow's flight...cannot log in. AA.com won't let me reset password and cannot log in.

Called AA today and was told that, 'An Analyst is looking at your account, however there are no notes here for me to help you.' I was told that I'd probably get an email in a day or so regarding what this was about.

WTH?

Anyone have any idea what's going on?

Thanks!
How did it turn out— were you able to get it resolved?
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Old Apr 21, 2019, 3:42 pm
  #895  
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Originally Posted by rumboj
On a very serious note, when is this thread going to revert to the very important issues it was meant to cover?

I keep checking back but nope, nothing...not at all.
Slipping away from this again.

As I mentioned before, this isn’t even the right thread for the current discussion, there’s a companion thread:
Account fraud / breach: my account compromised, awards taken, etc.
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Old Apr 21, 2019, 4:54 pm
  #896  
 
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Originally Posted by JonNYC
Slipping away from this again.

As I mentioned before, this isn’t even the right thread for the current discussion, there’s a companion thread:
Account fraud / breach: my account compromised, awards taken, etc.
Maybe if we rename the two threads "I defrauded AA" and "Someone defrauded me" that would clear things up.
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Old Apr 21, 2019, 7:02 pm
  #897  
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Lightbulb Perfect!

Originally Posted by mcrw00
Maybe if we rename the two threads "I defrauded AA" and "Someone defrauded me" that would clear things up.
Ha! Exactly!!!!!!
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Old Apr 21, 2019, 7:36 pm
  #898  
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Originally Posted by mcrw00
Maybe if we rename the two threads "I defrauded AA" and "Someone defrauded me" that would clear things up.
the mods would be moving a lot of initially indignant threads from the latter to the former.
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Old Apr 22, 2019, 9:01 am
  #899  
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Exclamation

Folks - for this thread to be helpful, the discussion needs to stay on topic!

Interpersonal bickering needs to be taken outside of the thread. Massive tangents on police reports or password security have already been removed.

If you’d like to contribute to the topic at hand, please do! (But if you’d rather discuss password strengths, 2FA/MFA, working on public terminals, working in public in general, expectation of privacy in public, etc., please head to OMNI or a security-focused site.)

And I hate to have to say this, but a final reminder: members who repeatedly derail threads or engage in off-topic/personal discussion may be subject to discipline as laid out in FT Rules.


Thanks for your understanding and cooperation.
/Moderator

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Old May 2, 2019, 4:32 pm
  #900  
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Originally Posted by SeanMTX
All,

Need some help regarding American Airlines here. Changed my password yesterday via aa.com, went online last night to check seats for tomorrow's flight...cannot log in. AA.com won't let me reset password and cannot log in.

Called AA today and was told that, 'An Analyst is looking at your account, however there are no notes here for me to help you.' I was told that I'd probably get an email in a day or so regarding what this was about.

WTH?

Anyone have any idea what's going on?

Thanks!
Originally Posted by JonNYC
How did it turn out— were you able to get it resolved?
I guess this one will slip past and into the mystery books...
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