While our physical branches will be closed, you can continue to access your accounts through:
Online Banking, Mobile Banking App, and ATM Services
We encourage you to take advantage of these convenient options for your banking needs during the holiday.
Thank you for banking with us, and we wish you a safe holiday!
FDIC-Insured - Backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government
Internet Fraud Warnings
Du Quoin State Bank welcomes the responsibility of protecting our customers' privacy. In an effort to educate our customers we have posted information on phishing and spoofing on our bank website.
Phishing is the latest form of identity theft. It's when thieves act as if they are representing an organization and try to “hook” the consumer into providing personal information. Once the consumer is “hooked”, the thieves can do lasting damage to a consumer's financial accounts. They can dupe customers into providing their Social Security numbers, financial account numbers, PINs, mothers' maiden names and other personal information.
The thieves often pose as a
Here's how it works
Consumers receive an email from an organization with which they do business. The email typically includes bogus appeals such as problems with an account or billing errors, and asks the consumer to confirm his/her personal information. Different approaches include things such as "We're updating our records," "We've identified fraudulent activity on your account," or "Valuable account and personal information was lost due to a computer glitch." To encourage people to act immediately, the email usually threatens that the account could be closed or canceled.
Most emails ask recipients to follow an embedded link that takes them to an exact replica of the victim company's Web site. Graphics on the counterfeit site are so convincing that even experts often can have a hard time distinguishing the fake site from the real one.
Despite the convincing appeals, consumers should NOT respond to unsolicited emails that direct them to divulge personal identifying information. Reputable organizations that consumers legitimately do business with generally do not request account numbers or passwords unless the consumer initiated the transaction.
Unfortunately, by hijacking the trusted brands of well-known and reputable organizations nationwide, phishers are able to convince some recipients to respond to them, enough that the FBI identifies phishing as the "hottest, most troubling new scam on the Internet."
Du Quoin State Bank wants to assure our customers that we do not send any email asking you to send us, via email, any personal or private identifying information.
Below are some security suggestions for Internet users
To learn more about email scams and what you can do to protect yourself online, you can visit
FDIC Identify Theft at https://www.fdic.gov/consumers/assistance/protection/IdTheft.html