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What is identity
theft? Identity theft occurs when someone uses your name, address,
Social Security number (SSN), bank or credit card
account number, or other identifying information without
your knowledge to commit fraud or other
crimes.
How can someone steal my
identity? Identity thieves may use a variety
of low- and high-tech methods to gain access to your
personally identifying information. For example:
- They get information from
businesses or institutions by:
- stealing records from their
employer,
- bribing an employee who has
access to the records,
- conning information out of
employees, or
- hacking into the
organization's computers.
- They rummage through your
trash, the trash of businesses, or dumps in a practice
known as "dumpster diving."
- They obtain credit reports by
abusing their employer's authorized access to credit
reports or by posing as a landlord, employer or
someone else who may have a legitimate need for and a
legal right to the information.
- They steal credit and debit
card account numbers as your card is processed by
using a special information storage device in a
practice known as "skimming."
- They steal wallets and purses
containing identification and credit and bank cards.
- They steal mail, including
bank and credit card statements, pre-approved credit
offers, new checks, or tax information.
- They complete a "change of
address form" to divert mail to another location.
- They steal personal
information from your home.
- They scam information from you
by posing as a legitimate business person or
government official.
What are the
consequences of identity theft? Once
identity thieves have your personal information, they
may:
- Go on spending sprees using
your credit and debit card account numbers to buy
"big-ticket" items like computers that they can easily
sell.
- Open a new credit card
account, using your name, date of birth and SSN. When
they don't pay the bills, the delinquent account is
reported on your credit report.
- Change the mailing address on
your credit card account. The imposter then runs up
charges on the account. Because the bills are being
sent to the new address, it may take some time before
you realize there's a problem.
- Take out auto loans in your
name.
- Establish phone or wireless
service in your name.
- Counterfeit checks or debit
cards, and drain your bank account.
- Open a bank account in your
name and write bad checks on that
account.
- File for bankruptcy under your
name to avoid paying debts they've incurred, or to
avoid eviction.
- Give your name to the police
during an arrest. If they are released and don't show
up for their court date, an arrest warrant could be
issued in your name.
What is
"pretexting" and how does it relate to identity
theft? Pretexting is the practice of getting
your personal information under false pretenses.
Pretexters sell your information to people who may use
it to get credit in your name, steal your assets, or to
investigate or sue you. Pretexting is against the law.
Pretexters use a variety of tactics to
get your personal information. For example, a pretexter
may call, claim he's from a survey firm, and ask you a
few questions. When the pretexter has the information he
wants, he uses it to call your financial institution. He
pretends to be you or someone with authorized access to
your account. He might claim that he's forgotten his
checkbook and needs information about his account. In
this way, the pretexter may be able to obtain personal
information about you such as your SSN, bank and credit
card account numbers, information in your credit report,
and the existence and size of your savings and
investment portfolios.
Keep in mind that some information
about you may be a matter of public record, such as
whether you own a home, pay your real estate taxes, or
have ever filed for bankruptcy. It is not pretexting for
another person to collect this kind of information.
By law, it's illegal for anyone to:
- use false, fictitious or
fraudulent statements or documents to get customer
information from a financial institution or directly
from a customer of a financial institution.
- use forged, counterfeit, lost,
or stolen documents to get customer information from a
financial institution or directly from a customer of a
financial institution.
- ask another person to get
someone else's customer information using false,
fictitious or fraudulent statements or using false,
fictitious or fraudulent documents or forged,
counterfeit, lost, or stolen documents.
How
long can identity theft problems go on?
It's difficult to predict how long the
effects of identity theft may linger. That's because it
depends on many factors including the type of theft,
whether the thief sold or passed your information on to
other thieves, whether the thief is caught, and problems
related to correcting your credit report.
Victims of identity theft should
monitor their credit reports and other financial records
for several months after they discover the crime. Credit
reports should be checked once every three months in the
first year of the theft, and once a year thereafter.
Keep alert for other signs of identity theft. See How
can I tell if I'm a victim of identity theft?
Victims should not delay in correcting
their records and contacting all companies that opened
fraudulent accounts. The longer the inaccurate
information goes uncorrected, the longer it will take to
resolve the problem.
How can
I tell if I'm a victim of identity theft?
Although any
of these indications could be a result of a simple
error, you should not assume that there’s been a mistake
and do nothing. Always follow up with the business or
institution to find out.
Are
there any other steps I can take to make sure I'm not an
identity theft victim?
If an
identity thief is opening new credit accounts in your
name, these accounts are likely to show up on your
credit report. You can find out by ordering a copy of
your credit report from any of three major credit
bureaus.
Check
your report carefully to make sure it is accurate.
See
What should I look for on a credit report to indicate
identity theft? If you do
find any inaccurate information, you should check your
reports from the other two credit bureaus. Note: If your
personal information has been lost or stolen, you should
check all of your reports more frequently for the first
year. |