HR4936-119

In Committee

TRAPS Act

119th Congress Introduced Aug 8, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

The TRAPS Act establishes a Treasury-chaired Task Force for Recognizing and Averting Payment Scams within 90 days of enactment. The task force includes federal regulators and enforcement agencies such as the CFPB, FCC, FTC, DOJ, OCC, Federal Reserve, NCUA, FDIC, and FinCEN, plus representatives from financial institutions, credit unions, digital payment networks, community banks, consumer groups, technology or online platform associations, scam victims, scam support networks, and other stakeholders. The task force must examine scam trends, spoofed calls, scam texts, malicious ads and websites, payment-platform scams, business email compromise, consumer education, law-enforcement coordination, international approaches, and whether additional legislation would help. It must meet at least three times in the first year and publish a report to Congress within one year with recommendations for detection, prevention, investigation, prosecution, data collection, and intergovernmental cooperation.

Who Benefits and How

Payment scam victims benefit because the task force must include victim-support perspectives and recommend ways to identify, prevent, and prosecute scams. Consumer groups benefit from a formal seat in federal payment-scam policy discussions. Financial institution representatives benefit by shaping recommendations around payment-platform fraud, business email compromise, and industry prevention practices. Digital payment network representatives benefit by helping align technology-platform responsibilities with law-enforcement and consumer-protection strategies.

Who Bears the Burden and How

Treasury task force staff must organize the task force, fill vacancies, hold meetings, and produce the public report. Federal financial regulators must devote representatives and expertise to cross-sector scam-prevention recommendations. Technology platform associations must participate in scrutiny of malicious ads, pop-ups, websites, and scam tactics. Law enforcement agencies must coordinate on recommendations for identifying and pursuing payment-scam perpetrators.

Key Provisions

  • Establishes a Treasury-chaired Task Force for Recognizing and Averting Payment Scams within 90 days.
  • Requires representation from federal regulators, financial institutions, credit unions, payment networks, community banks, consumer groups, technology platforms, and scam victims.
  • Directs the task force to evaluate spoofed calls, scam texts, malicious ads, websites, payment-platform scams, and business email compromise.
  • Requires at least three meetings in the first year and a public report to Congress within one year.

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Creates a Treasury-led Task Force for Recognizing and Averting Payment Scams with federal, financial, technology, consumer, and victim-support representation and a public report within one year.

Key Policy Areas

Consumer Finance, Fraud Prevention, Financial Technology

Primary Purpose

Creates a Treasury-led Task Force for Recognizing and Averting Payment Scams with federal, financial, technology, consumer, and victim-support representation and a public report within one year.

Policy Domains

Consumer Finance Fraud Prevention Financial Technology

Resolution provisions

Identified Gains
  • Payment scam victims
  • Consumer groups
  • Financial institution representatives
  • Digital payment network representatives
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ih
Consumer groups: ,
Payment scam victims: ,
Financial institution representatives: ,
Digital payment network representatives: ,
Identified Costs
  • Treasury task force staff
  • Federal financial regulators
  • Technology platform associations
  • Law enforcement agencies
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ih
Law enforcement agencies: ,
Treasury task force staff: ,
Federal financial regulators: ,
Technology platform associations: ,

Legislative Progress

In Committee
Introduced Committee Passed
Aug 8, 2025

Mr. Nunn of Iowa (for himself and Mr. Himes) introduced …

Aug 8, 2025

Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.

Aug 8, 2025

Introduced in House

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.

Government
4 mentions across 2 clauses
-4 negative

Federal financial regulators, Treasury task force staff

Consumers
2 mentions across 2 clauses
+2 positive

Payment scam victims

Nonprofits
2 mentions across 2 clauses
+2 positive

Consumer groups

Financial Services
2 mentions across 2 clauses
?2 uncertain

Financial institution representatives

Technology
2 mentions across 2 clauses
?2 uncertain

Digital payment network representatives

2/3
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Consumer Finance Fraud Prevention Financial Technology

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology