Fraud in land transportation is no longer a marginal phenomenon: it now takes the form of an organized system, fueled by digitalization and structural flaws in the way the industry verifies the identity and legitimacy of stakeholders. The observation is simple: with minimal resources, a fraudster can pose as a credible carrier, intercept shipments, divert payments, then disappear to reappear under a new name.
The analysis draws a parallel between the era when regulation made market access difficult — thus naturally filtering — and the current environment where creating a “semblance of legitimacy” can be done very quickly. Platforms, digital exchanges, and accelerated processes have created fluidity… but also opportunities for circumvention, especially when verification relies on weak signals and easily falsified documents.
The most worrying point: the technology to tighten controls already exists (enhanced verification, traceability, authentication), but the ecosystem does not consistently enforce it. As a result, the risk spreads: shippers, freight forwarders, brokers, insurers, and carriers find themselves exposed to a rapidly adapting criminality that exploits gray areas.
Key message for the sector: as long as an “operational proof of identity” does not become a standard, fraud will continue to thrive — not due to a lack of tools, but due to a lack of obligation and collective alignment.





















