Identity Theft
Statistics
- Over a three-year period the US Secret Service has noticed an increase in the number of cases considered directly associated with identity theft
- In 1997 the cost to individuals and financial institutions was estimated to be $745 million
- Beyond the financial damages to individuals there is also the damage these crimes do to the credit of the victims
- In 2001 there were 49,711 complaints on internet fraud reported to the FBI, this does not include reports/complaints made locally
What could this mean to you?
- A call from your bank reference returned checks on your account
- A call from a collection agency demanding payment for merchandise you never ordered
- Merchants refusing to accept your checks (even if your bank account is in good standing, because your credit report is bad)
- A call from a merchant about your bad check and wanting to know what you are going to do about it
- False debts and liens… your real estate closing is interrupted J
- ob interviews are mysteriously cancelled
- Arrest and incarceration until “your true identity” is proven
- It may take years to correct this mess
How they got your information – common methods
- Mail Theft
- New checks stolen out of you mail box
- Your credit card bills stolen out of your mail box
- They notice the flag up on your mail box and they steal your outgoing bills
- You gave your personal information to them
- You entered a contest like at the state fair and filled in a lot of your personal information
- Sweepstakes entries and they sell your information to other people
- Waiters or cashiers keep you card, skim your card, or keep your number to use later
- Court records or public information sources
- Surveys On-line
- Someone illegally obtained your credit history report
- Someone posed as your landlord and ran a credit check on you
- Posed as a prospective employer
- Posed as a lender
- Residential or Auto Burglaries
- Many burglars now spend time going through desk and filing cabinets to get your personal information (account#’s, PIN’s, DOB’s, credit card #’s…)
- Many burglars also spend time going through your glove box, checking your visors, and checking consoles for your personal information
- Pickpocketing
- Numerous other methods, these are some of the most common
Tips to try to prevent becoming a victim
General Tips
- Print your name on your checks differently than you sign (ie. sign your full name and only print your initials on the checks)
- Use a PO box on the checks, you can give them your street address if a business needs that information
- NEVER! Print your Social Security Number on your checks
- Be aware of pickpockets and thieves and take basic preventative steps to avoid having your information stolen
- Make sure you do not have your SS# as your driver’s license number
- Do not include private information in any survey you take
- Be wary of entering a contest… especially a contest connected to sales (this information can be used and/or sold)
- Do not give your information over the phone unless you called them and you know who you are giving the information to
- Photocopy both sides of all credit cards, licenses, and other important documents in your wallet and purse and keep this information in a couple of safe locations (not in your car)
- Don’t throw papers with your information out, shred these document first and burn them if possible
- Write letters to the companies you deal with asking that they do not share, trade, or sell your personal information
- Never leave credit card receipts at businesses
- Never put your PINs (personal identification numbers) where a thief can find them if your wallet or purse is lost or stolen, or if your home is burglarized
- Review a copy of your personal earnings and benefit estimate statement from the Social Security Administration every three years
- CAREFULLY review your bank and credit card statements for errors
- If you order preprinted checks, it is best if you can pick these up at your bank, so they can not be stolen out of your mailbox
- Do not carry credit cards you are not going to need, leave such credit cards, your social security card, birth certificate and passport at home in a safe place unless you truly will need them
- Destroy any expired credit cards, credit card receipts, ATM receipts, extra bank deposit slips, checks from closed accounts, old bank statements, cancelled checks, and pre-approved credit card applications…
- Check your credit report annually
- Be aware that this type of crime happens all the time and do not let your guard down!
On-line Tips
- Never open any email if you do not know who it is from
- Always have a virus protection program running on your computer
- Consider using a firewall
- Do not leave your computer hooked to the internet
- Do not give any information about yourself to anyone you chat with or who may send you an instant message (this includes your name, city you live in, etc.)
- Do not have a profile on-line that you put any personal information on (name, city you live in, age…)
- While shopping on-line, only buy from a secure site and look at the site’s privacy policy about sharing your information
- If you don’t feel safe using a site’s server, even if it is secure, call in your order
- Do not include personal information in email either, it is not safe
- Be careful where and how you do business on the internet, 40% to 45% of fraud complaints on the internet involve internet auction sites
- Again! Be aware that identity theft and fraud happen on the computer all the time and don’t let your guard down
What to do if you are a victim
- RULE #1 – ACT QUICKLY! MINIMIZE DAMAGE!
- First – Contact the police
- make a police incident report
- include any items that you are missing including checks, ID, DL, SS cards, etc.
- to make the report you should contact the agency where the items were taken from you or where the items were used
- When you do make a report with the police note the agency, the name of the officer taking the report and the case/incident number for future reference
- The next day or two call or go back by the agency and try to get a copy of the incident report, then run several copies of this report (you will need them)
- While doing these things always be patient, persistent, professional, and polite (this will normally get a lot more done)
- If checks are stolen or your checking account used
- close the affected accounts
- ask that your affected accounts be “flagged” for possible unauthorized activity” and that a victim’s statement be attached
- you could also place a stop payment on the check(s) that were stolen
- expect to be asked to complete an “Affidavit(s) of Forgery” and probably provide a handwriting exemplar
- Open a new checking account with new checks
- Report the circumstances to local DA’s office via letter, so that the “bogus check division” can be alerted
- Keep a log of all contacts made from merchants, financial institutions, collection agencies, law enforcement agencies, etc, including the date, time, telephone number, address, person you spoke with, any case numbers, etc.
- If your credit cards are stolen or used without authorization
- Contact the issuing financial institution(s)
- you can use the toll free numbers on your monthly statement
- cancel all stolen or unauthorized credit/debit card account(s)
- ask that your account be flagged for possible unauthorized activity
- have a new card issued with new account numbers
- Keep a log of all the contacts you make and note as much information as possible (see above)
- Also contact the U.S. Secret Service, they have jurisdiction over financial fraud cases, but they have a high dollar limit before they will investigate it
- Contact the big three credit bureaus (Trans Union, Experian, Equifax)
- Report the theft, misuse, or unauthorized account(s)
- Request that your accounts be flagged for possible unauthorized activity at your request
- Note the period of time that the alert will be posted and how to extend it
- Add a victim’s statement to the report
- Request that you be contacted to verify all applications for credit in your name
- Make sure that the credit bureaus provide you with names and phone numbers of credit grantors with whom fraudulent accounts have been opened
- Request in writing all fraudulent information and inquiries be permanently removed from your credit report
- Request any helpful information be mailed to you to help you recover from being a victim