Kompli-Global launches unique database for corporate fraud detection
John E. Kaye
- Published
- Banking & Finance, Home, Technology

Kompli-Investigate™ to completely rebuild and risk assess Companies House registries
FraudTech specialists launch Kompli-Investigate™ to help businesses in the payments and wider financial services sector to complete potentially missing pieces of the due diligence puzzle and present them with a complete insight into a corporate’s ownership, its related parties, and its propensity to be linked to fraud and financial crime.
Fraudsters are involved in an elaborate game of hide and seek to bypass payments companies’ fraud prevention systems to carry out their crimes. They are smart and know that Companies House does not have the remit or resources to check the accuracy of information that is submitted and merely records the required information provided. This enables fraudsters to hide the fact they are connected to other companies by simply registering, for example, as Mr J Smith, Mr John Smith and Mr Jon Smith and even though the same address is used these will appear as three different, unconnected companies.
Martin Pashley, Chief Commercial Officer at Kompli-Global, explains: “Companies House loopholes are almost single handily driving a huge percentage of UK fraud as the fraud is hardly ever in the first company a payment provider is taking on. It is cleverly buried in a complex web of connected companies and linked Directors. This is why we are launching a database that replicates Companies House data, but in an intelligent, complete and logical way that exposes potential wrongdoing.”
It is with this in mind that Kompli-Global, the leading FraudTech specialist, has today announced the launch of Kompli-Investigate™, a rich research utility, fraud prevention and detection system that allows for deeper investigation of corporate entities and the individuals connected to those organisations.
A key component of the Kompli-Investigate™ system is Kompli-Konnect™, the most complete and accurate corporate structure data available that has collated and reconfigured all of Companies House data since 1986. Kompli-Global linked and connected all directors, owners, companies and addresses to provide the most accurate and current entity resolution available. Furthermore, it updates all new and changed information and re-maps the entire database every night. In-house experts then overlay known fraud characteristics and suspicious Modus Operandi (MO) scenarios to give a totally unique risk prognosis for users, as well as alerting entities to criminal activity that fraudsters want to remain hidden.
With this in-house and technological expertise, Kompli-Investigate™ completes the potentially missing pieces of the fraud prevention puzzle by enabling payments and fintech companies to make connections, before conducting deep due diligence for convictions, allegations of criminality and associations to adverse events and activity. The end result is a report of the facts available in seconds so that entities spot fraudsters or investigate those companies or directors further to ensure they are legitimate and not criminally intent.
Additionally, if a newly registered company is looking to open an account, Kompli-Investigate™ can flag all connected businesses and individuals to that company. This added investigative tier, adds a unique predictive layer to due diligence and shows Companies that are potentially predicated to commit a crime.
“Today’s fraudsters know exactly how to work the system but Kompli-Investigate™ is designed to significantly enhance payment providers’ fraud prevention efforts by supplying them with the information they need to really question the business they are taking on. For example, why is this business registered at the same address as 3,000 other businesses, why is it linked to ten other businesses with the same Directors, including a number that have been disqualified and haven’t submitted accounts for years. These are red flags that otherwise wouldn’t be picked up if you cannot unravel a fraudster’s web of companies and relationships,” said Martin Pashley, Chief Commercial Officer at Kompli-Global. “Fraudsters have identified Companies House data as a weak link in the fraud prevention chain but Kompli-Investigate™, in collaboration with payment providers’ existing systems, is going to change the rules of their hugely profitable game of hide and seek.”
Further information
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Unclear AI rules risk driving talent away from UK employers, survey suggests -
Global fraud summit told AI scams and sextortion are driving industrial-scale crime -
AI boom leaves many workers without the data skills employers now need -
Cybersecurity becomes Britain’s most sought-after tech skill as pay and hiring surge -
AI now trusted to plan holidays more than work, shopping or health advice, survey finds -
Could AI finally mean fewer potholes? Swedish firm expands road-scanning technology across three continents -
Government consults on social media ban for under-16s and potential overnight curfews -
Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey cuts nearly half of Block staff, says AI is changing how the company operates -
AI-driven phishing surges 204% as firms face a malicious email every 19 seconds -
Deepfake celebrity ads drive new wave of investment scams -
Europe eyes Australia-style social media crackdown for children -
Europe opens NanoIC pilot line to design the computer chips of the 2030s -
Building the materials of tomorrow one atom at a time: fiction or reality? -
Universe ‘should be thicker than this’, say scientists after biggest sky survey ever -
Lasers finally unlock mystery of Charles Darwin’s specimen jars -
Women, science and the price of integrity -
Meet the AI-powered robot that can sort, load and run your laundry on its own -
UK organisations still falling short on GDPR compliance, benchmark report finds -
A practical playbook for securing mission-critical information -
Cracking open the black box: why AI-powered cybersecurity still needs human eyes -
Tech addiction: the hidden cybersecurity threat -
Parliament invites cyber experts to give evidence on new UK cyber security bill -
ISF warns geopolitics will be the defining cybersecurity risk of 2026 -
AI boom triggers new wave of data-centre investment across Europe -
Make boards legally liable for cyber attacks, security chief warns


























