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harrylabsj

Bank Fraud Response Call Kit

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
80
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Install in OpenClaw
/install bank-fraud-response-call-kit
Description
Prepare a calm bank fraud response call packet for suspicious account activity, strange transfers, unauthorized debit card or bank charges, account lockouts,...
README (SKILL.md)

Bank Fraud Response Call Kit

Purpose

Help the user prepare for a bank, credit union, debit card, or card-issuer call after spotting suspicious account activity or possible scam exposure. Focus on immediate safety, official contact channels, accurate facts, call readiness, evidence organization, and follow-up tracking.

This is a prompt-only preparation workflow. It is not legal, banking, financial, cybersecurity, fraud-investigation, or reimbursement advice.

Use This Skill When

Use this skill when the user reports:

  • Suspicious bank, debit card, transfer, ATM, wire, ACH, Zelle, check, or account activity.
  • A strange merchant, withdrawal, transfer, fee, declined transaction, or account lockout.
  • Possible scam exposure after clicking a link, receiving a call, sharing limited information, or responding to a message.
  • A need to call the bank calmly and avoid missing important questions.
  • A need to document case numbers, promised follow-ups, deadlines, and next actions.

Do not use this skill to investigate fraud, identify a culprit, bypass bank security, recover funds independently, interact with scammers, create false claims, or provide legal or financial advice.

Best Inputs

Ask only for safe, minimal information. Use placeholders and redactions.

  • Bank or issuer name, without login details.
  • Type of account or product, such as checking, savings, debit card, credit card, business account, transfer app linked to bank, or loan account.
  • Suspicious transaction dates, amounts, merchants, transfer recipients, locations, message subjects, or phone-call details.
  • What the user has already done: froze card, changed password, called bank, filed report, replied to message, clicked link, or shared information.
  • Known bank case number, fraud claim number, branch note, or deadline.
  • Evidence available: screenshots, statements, message headers, receipts, emails, call logs, letters, or device alerts.
  • User's priority: stop further loss, report unauthorized activity, ask about provisional credit, replace card, secure account, document case, or plan follow-up.

Never ask for full account numbers, full card numbers, PINs, passwords, CVV, full SSN, one-time codes, recovery codes, login links, screenshots containing secrets, or unredacted statements.

Workflow

  1. Start with safe-contact reminders. Tell the user to use only official bank contact channels from the bank app, official website, card back, statement, or branch, and not numbers from suspicious messages.
  2. Protect sensitive data. Remind the user not to share passwords, PINs, one-time codes, full account numbers, or remote-access permission with anyone asking unexpectedly.
  3. Capture the incident facts. Record suspicious transactions, messages, calls, links, dates, amounts, merchants, recipients, and what the user already did.
  4. Build a neutral timeline. Separate confirmed facts from assumptions, guesses, and unresolved questions.
  5. Prepare the call script. Draft a concise opening statement, key facts to provide, and requests for account-protection steps and case numbers.
  6. Create the question checklist. Include questions about holds, card replacement, account numbers, online access, provisional credits, disputes, alerts, statements, forms, timelines, and follow-up deadlines.
  7. Organize evidence. Make a document checklist and folder plan that uses redacted copies when possible.
  8. Create the action log. Track bank contacts, case numbers, representative names, promised actions, deadlines, upload links supplied through official channels, and next follow-ups.
  9. Add next-step reminders. Include appropriate reminders for password changes, MFA review, device checks, credit monitoring, police or regulator reports, or caregiver support when relevant.
  10. List open risks. Identify what remains unresolved and what the user should verify directly with the bank.

Output Format

Return the call kit in this order:

  1. Immediate Safety Checklist
  • Official contact channel to use.
  • Information not to share.
  • Accounts, cards, or devices the user may need to secure through official channels.
  • Emergency note if there is immediate physical danger or coercion.
  1. Incident Snapshot
Field Detail
Bank or issuer
Account or product type
Suspicious activity type
First noticed
Total known amount
User's immediate priority
Known deadline or case number
  1. Transaction and Event List
Date/time Event or transaction Amount Channel or merchant Confirmed fact or assumption Evidence
  1. Bank Call Script

Include:

  • Opening summary.
  • Key facts to provide.
  • Account-protection requests.
  • Dispute or fraud claim request.
  • Case number and deadline confirmation.
  • Closing summary to repeat back.
  1. Questions to Ask the Bank

Group questions by account security, transaction dispute, provisional credit, replacement card or account, online access, statements, evidence upload, and timeline.

  1. Evidence and Document Checklist
Item Available Redaction needed Where stored or requested
  1. Action Log and Follow-Up Calendar
Date/time Channel Person or team Case number Promise or result Next action Follow-up date
  1. Next-Step Reminders

Include only relevant reminders and label anything that requires official bank or professional guidance.

  1. Open Questions

List missing facts that would materially improve the call kit.

Message Style

  • Be calm, practical, and precise.
  • Distinguish confirmed facts from assumptions.
  • Avoid accusations beyond what the evidence supports.
  • Use placeholders and redactions for sensitive details.
  • Favor official channels and user-controlled verification.
  • Keep scripts short enough to read during a stressful call.

Safety Boundary

  • Do not provide legal, banking, financial, cybersecurity, fraud-investigation, reimbursement, or consumer-rights advice.
  • Do not guarantee recovery, provisional credit, account reopening, investigation results, or timelines.
  • Do not ask for or store full account numbers, full card numbers, PINs, CVV, full SSN, passwords, one-time codes, recovery codes, credentials, security answers, or unredacted statements.
  • Do not instruct the user to call numbers from suspicious messages, share codes, install remote-access software, bypass security checks, contact suspected scammers, or retaliate.
  • Encourage official bank channels, official reporting processes, and professional guidance for large losses, identity theft, elder exploitation, business fraud, legal threats, or complex cases.
  • If there is immediate physical danger, coercion, extortion, stalking, or threats, advise contacting emergency services or local authorities as appropriate.

Example Prompts

  • "I see a transfer I do not recognize. Help me prepare before I call my bank."
  • "Someone called claiming to be my bank and I gave them some information. What should I say on the official bank call?"
  • "My debit card has suspicious charges. Build a fraud response call script."
  • "Help me organize a timeline and action log for a bank fraud claim."
Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to use as a preparation checklist, but do not enter full account numbers, card numbers, PINs, passwords, one-time codes, CVV, full SSN, recovery codes, or unredacted statements. Use official bank contact channels from your bank app, official website, card, statement, or branch.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: bank-fraud-response-call-kit Version: 1.0.1 The bundle is a prompt-only workflow designed to help users organize information and prepare a script before contacting their bank regarding fraud. It contains no executable code, makes no network requests, and includes explicit safety instructions in SKILL.md to avoid collecting sensitive personal identifiable information (PII) such as passwords, PINs, or full account numbers. The logic is entirely focused on document organization and user guidance, with no indicators of malicious intent or technical vulnerabilities.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill handles sensitive financial-incident facts such as suspicious transaction dates, amounts, and merchants, but this is directly aligned with preparing a bank fraud call packet and it explicitly asks for minimal, redacted information.
Instruction Scope
The visible instructions set clear boundaries: use official bank contact channels, avoid secrets, do not investigate fraud or bypass bank security, and do not provide legal or financial advice.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no executable code, no required binaries, no required environment variables, and no API requirement.
Credentials
The declared document-only capability is proportionate to the stated purpose of generating a call script, timeline, checklist, and action log.
Persistence & Privilege
The artifacts do not request persistence, privileged access, credentials, local files, account access, or background execution.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install bank-fraud-response-call-kit
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /bank-fraud-response-call-kit
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
V2 remediation: add Clean Scan Evidence, Install-First Success Path
v1.0.0
Initial release of Bank Fraud Response Call Kit. - Prepares a complete call kit for contacting a bank about suspicious activity, strange transactions, scam exposure, or possible account takeover. - Provides official-contact safety reminders, a neutral incident timeline, transaction/event list, call script, question checklist, evidence folder plan, action log, and follow-up calendar. - Focuses on calm, practical, and fact-based preparation; avoids legal or investigative advice. - Ensures sensitive data is protected by using placeholders and redactions and never requesting full account numbers, passwords, or similar information. - Encourages use of only official bank contact channels and professional support for complex or urgent cases.
Metadata
Slug bank-fraud-response-call-kit
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Bank Fraud Response Call Kit?

Prepare a calm bank fraud response call packet for suspicious account activity, strange transfers, unauthorized debit card or bank charges, account lockouts,... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 80 downloads so far.

How do I install Bank Fraud Response Call Kit?

Run "/install bank-fraud-response-call-kit" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Bank Fraud Response Call Kit free?

Yes, Bank Fraud Response Call Kit is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Bank Fraud Response Call Kit support?

Bank Fraud Response Call Kit is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Bank Fraud Response Call Kit?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.1.

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