Hot Checks

The Hot Check Department administers the Criminal District Attorney’s Hot Check Loss Prevention Program, conducts investigations into patterns of fraud that may be indicated by worthless check schemes, and offers assistance to those who may be victimized by identity theft.

2100 Bloomdale Road, Ste. 100
McKinney, Texas 75071
(972) 548-3602

The District Attorney’s Hot Check Department’s primary purpose is to receive complaints of theft arising from the passing of worthless checks and to develop those complaints into prosecutable cases. To help in this effort, the Criminal District Attorney’s office provides information to merchants on the proper procedures they should use in accepting a check for payment for their goods, products, or services. When proper procedures are used, the likelihood of catching the offender, obtaining restitution for the merchant and getting a conviction against the writer of a hot check greatly increases. You can review or download Accepting a Check and Procedure for Taking a Check to assist you in learning those proper procedures. You can download Acrobat Reader here for free.

Hot Checks Desk – Ext. 3602;

Matt Mayes, Felony Investigator – Ext. 4375; mmayes@collincountytx.gov

Filing a Check with the DA

If the check is an NSF check:

If the check was written on a closed account:

Merchants’ Hot Check Fast Filing Program

You can enroll in the District Attorney’s Hot Check Fast Filing Program:

Even if the Hot Check Department cannot develop a prosecutable case from a hot check you submit, we will still attempt to collect restitution for you as well as the statutory merchant fee to which you are entitled. If the case is a prosecutable case and is filed in court for prosecution, we will require that restitution and the merchant fee be paid as a condition of any plea bargain agreement or, if the court agrees, as a condition of probation, if granted by the court. The Collin County Criminal District Attorney’s Office will not dismiss a case solely because the offender pays restitution or because a victim wishes to drop charges. Once filed, the criminal case will proceed just as any other case normally would.

Substitute Checks

Federal law now allows banks to replace a check with an imaged substitute check. Your bank may use this process, and you would not receive the actual hot check you received and deposited. It is likely that in the near future original processed paper checks will no longer be made available to you, but for a fee you can obtain a substitute check from your bank. (The imaged checks you receive with your bank statement are not substitute checks.) Because of this fee, the Hot Check Department began to collect the maximum merchant fee of $30.00 on all returned checks written in 2004 and later. The collection of this fee should help to offset the cost of obtaining a substitute check.

Substitute checks from your bank are the only exception to the requirement that the Hot Check Department have the original hot check in order to accept it for collection and prosecution.

Some Things a Merchant Should Know

Not until all restitution and your merchant fee have been collected from the offender will you receive that money in the form of a restitution check from the Hot Check Department.