
WRITTEN BY SARAH COTTRELL
You may have laughed when news broke of the great Kit Kat heist, when 12 tons of the beloved candy bars were stolen from a truck between Poland and Italy. After all, in the age of hyper-surveillance, it feels impossible for a truck to simply disappear. But it turns out freight fraud is a massive, global problem that directly impacts everyone, even Mainers.
Freight fraud is a broad term covering schemes like double-brokering, carrier impersonation, and fictitious pickups, and it has become one of the most damaging forces in American trucking. The annual cost of freight fraud to the U.S. transportation industry is estimated at $6.6 billion, according to the American Transportation Research Institute. In Maine, 84.4% of communities rely exclusively on trucking to ensure access to goods, amounting to 52,650 tons per day, according to the Maine Motor Transportation Association. That means freight fraud isn’t an abstraction; it is a serious threat to local economies.
The mechanics of modern freight fraud are surprisingly simple. First, a criminal outfit creates a shell company to hide its identity and money. Next, it steals or illegally purchases a legitimate carrier’s identification and then poses as that carrier to a shipper or broker. The load gets picked up. And then it’s gone. But this is where the fallout happens: The legitimate carrier’s reputation takes a hit. The shipper absorbs the loss. And the broker, caught in the middle, faces lawsuits and insurance nightmares. The final insult is that consumers ultimately pay the price.
Logistics service providers, an important sector in the trucking industry, are particularly vulnerable. According to Trucking Dive, research suggests that more than 62% of theft incidents they experience are tied to fraudulent activity. That’s a staggering figure for a state like Maine, where many freight operations are small, family-owned businesses.
The problem is compounded by the fact that fraud thrives in the gaps, such as rushed onboarding, sloppy carrier verification, and the increasing sophistication of bad actors who now use generative AI to fabricate documents and mimic legitimate companies with striking accuracy.
The national industry has taken notice. The National Motor Freight Traffic Association Inc. launched its Freight Fraud Prevention Hub in early March, creating a centralized online platform for educational content, carrier verification tools, and fraud-prevention best practices aimed at carriers, shippers, and third-party logistics providers across the country. The launch coincides with the association’s new SCAC Verified initiative, which adds an additional layer of identity confirmation for carriers registering or renewing their Standard Carrier Alpha Codes, a mandatory identifier that tracks and documents truck movement.
“Most people don’t realize it, but the products we rely on every day — from the food in our fridge to the packages on our doorsteps — depend on a system that’s increasingly being targeted by criminals,” said Joe Ohr, chief operations and technical officer at NMFTA. “Freight fraud is one of those invisible issues that quietly drives up prices and disrupts supply.”
So what can the Maine trucking industry do to stop criminals from hurting wallets? Start with doubling down on basic cybersecurity, such as using strong passwords and two-factor authentication.
“One thing that is important to highlight is that many of the tactics these criminals are using are the same as those employed by traditional cybercriminals: theft of credentials, social engineering, digital impersonation, and spoofed (fake) websites that look like legitimate load boards or other trucking-related sites,” said Ben Wilkens, CISSP, CCSP, CISM, cybersecurity principal engineer at NMFTA. “To protect against these threats, it is vital to take a holistic approach and double down on ensuring good operational security through verification processes and multilayered checks on any high-risk actions — such as changing account details or modifying destinations on shipments in progress — as well as ensuring good cyber hygiene. Controls like multifactor authentication on all accounts, targeted social engineering training, and regular patching and update schedules for all software and systems go a long way toward lowering your risk from cyber-enabled cargo theft.”
While headlines about the Kit Kat heist may have read like a funny punchline, no one is laughing when invisible criminals threaten the Maine economy. To learn more about the Maine trucking industry, including how to get started, visit the Maine Motor Transport Association at mmta.com. To learn more about cargo crimes and how to prevent them, see the NMFTA Cybersecurity Cargo Crime Reduction Framework at info.nmfta.org.



