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What Should I Do To Avoid Becoming A Victim Of Identity
Theft?
To reduce
or minimize the risk of becoming a victim of identity theft or fraud, there are
some basic steps you can take. For starters, just remember the word "SCAM":
S
Be stingy
about giving out your personal information to others unless you have a reason to
trust them, regardless of where you are:
At Home.
- Start by adopting a "need to know" approach to your
personal data. Your credit card company may need to know your mother's maiden
name, so that it can verify your identity when you call to inquire about your
account. A person who calls you and says he's from your bank, however, doesn't
need to know that information if it's already on file with your bank; the only
purpose of such a call is to acquire that information for that person's
personal benefit. Also, the more information that you have printed on your
personal bank checks -- such as your Social Security number or home telephone
number -- the more personal data you are routinely handing out to people who
may not need that information.
- If someone you don't know calls you on the telephone and
offers you the chance to receive a "major" credit card, a prize, or other
valuable item, but asks you for personal data -- such as your Social Security
number, credit card number or expiration date, or mother's maiden name -- ask
them to send you a written application form.
- If they won't do it, tell them you're not interested and
hang up.
- If they will, review the application carefully when you
receive it and make sure it's going to a company or financial institution
that's well-known and reputable. The
Better Business Bureau can give you information about businesses that have
been the subject of complaints.
On
Travel.
- If you're traveling, have your mail held at your local
post office, or ask someone you know well and trust another family member, a
friend, or a neighbor to collect and hold your mail while you're away.
- If you have to telephone someone while you're traveling,
and need to pass on personal financial information to the person you're
calling, don't do it at an open telephone booth where passersby can listen in
on what you're saying; use a telephone booth where you can close the door, or
wait until you're at a less public location to call.
C Check
your financial information regularly, and look for what should be there and what
shouldn't:
What Should Be There.
- If you have bank or credit card accounts, you should be
receiving monthly statements that list transactions for the most recent month
or reporting period.
- If you're not receiving monthly statements for the
accounts you know you have, call the financial institution or credit card
company immediately and ask about it.
- If you're told that your statements are being mailed to
another address that you haven't authorized, tell the financial institution or
credit card representative immediately that you did not authorize the change of
address and that someone may be improperly using your accounts. In that
situation, you should also ask for copies of all statements and debit or charge
transactions that have occurred since the last statement you received.
Obtaining those copies will help you to work with the financial institution or
credit card company in determining whether some or all of those debit or charge
transactions were fraudulent.
What Shouldn't Be There.
- If someone has gotten your financial data and made
unauthorized debits or charges against your financial accounts, checking your
monthly statements carefully may be the quickest way for you to find out. Too
many of us give those statements, or the enclosed checks or credit
transactions, only a quick glance, and don't review them closely to make sure
there are no unauthorized withdrawals or charges.
- If someone has managed to get access to your mail or
other personal data, and opened any credit cards in your name or taken any
funds from your bank account, contact your financial institution or credit card
company immediately to report those transactions and to request further
action.
A Ask
periodically for a copy of your credit report.
Your credit report should
list all bank and financial accounts under your name, and will provide other
indications of whether someone has wrongfully opened or used any accounts in
your name.
M
Maintain careful records
of your banking and financial accounts.
Even though financial
institutions are required to maintain copies of your checks, debit transactions,
and similar transactions for five years, you should retain your monthly
statements and checks for at least one year, if not more. If you need to dispute
a particular check or transaction especially if they purport to bear your
signatures your original records will be more immediately accessible and
useful to the institutions that you have contacted.
Even if you take all of
these steps, however, it's still possible that you can become a victim of
identity theft. Records containing your personal data -- credit-card receipts or
car-rental agreements, for example -- may be found by or shared with someone who
decides to use your data for fraudulent purposes.
What Should I Do If I've Become A Victim Of Identity Theft?
If you
think you've become a victim of identity theft or fraud, act immediately to
minimize the damage to your personal funds and financial accounts, as well as
your reputation. Here's a list -- based in part on a
checklist prepared by the
California Public Interest Research Group (CalPIRG) and the
Privacy Rights Clearinghouse -- of some actions that you should take right
away:
- Contact the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to report the situation, whether --
-
Online,
- By telephone toll-free at 1-877-ID THEFT (877-438-4338)
or TDD at 202-326-2502, or
- By mail to
Consumer Response Center, FTC,
600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20580.
Under the
Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act , the
Federal Trade Commission is responsible for receiving and processing
complaints from people who believe they may be victims of identity theft,
providing informational materials to those people, and referring those
complaints to appropriate entities, including the major credit reporting
agencies and law enforcement agencies. For further information, please check the
FTC's identity theft Web pages . You can also call your local office of the
FBI or the
U.S. Secret Service to report crimes relating to identity theft and fraud.
You may also need to contact
other agencies for other types of identity theft:
- Your local office of the
Postal Inspection Service if you suspect that an identity thief has
submitted a change-of-address form with the Post Office to redirect your mail,
or has used the mail to commit frauds involving your identity;
- The
Social Security Administration if you suspect that your Social Security
number is being fraudulently used (call 800-269-0271 to report the fraud);
- The
Internal Revenue ServiceIf you suspect the improper use of identification
information in connection with tax violations (call 1-800-829-0433 to report
the violations).
Call the
fraud units of the three principal credit reporting companies:
Equifax:
- To report fraud, call (800) 525-6285 or write to
P.O. Box 740250, Atlanta, GA
30374-0250.
- To order a copy of your credit report ($8 in most
states), write to P.O. Box 740241, Atlanta, GA 30374-0241, or call (800)
685-1111.
- To dispute information in your report, call the phone
number provided on your credit report.
- To opt out of pre-approved offers of credit, call (888)
567-8688 or write to Equifax Options,
P.O. Box 740123, Atlanta GA
30374-0123.
Experian (formerly TRW)
- To report fraud, call (888) EXPERIAN or (888) 397-3742,
fax to (800) 301-7196, or write to
P.O. Box 1017, Allen, TX
75013.
- To order a copy of your credit report ($8 in most
states): P.O. Box 2104,
Allen TX 75013, or call (888) EXPERIAN.
- To dispute information in your report, call the phone
number provided on your credit report.
- To opt out of pre-approved offers of credit and
marketing lists, call (800) 353-0809 or (888) 5OPTOUT or write to
P.O. Box 919, Allen, TX 75013.
Trans Union
- To report fraud, call (800) 680-7289 or write to
P.O. Box 6790, Fullerton, CA
92634.
- To order a copy of your credit report ($8 in most
states), write to P.O. Box 390, Springfield, PA 19064 or call: (800) 888-4213.
- To dispute information in your report, call the phone
number provided on your credit report.
- To opt out of pre-approved offers of credit and
marketing lists, call (800) 680-7293 or (888) 5OPTOUT or write to P.O
Box 97328, Jackson, MS 39238.
Contact
all creditors with whom your name or identifying data have been fraudulently
used. For example, you may need to contact your long-distance telephone company
if your long-distance calling card has been stolen or you find fraudulent
charges on your bill.
Contact all financial
institutions where you have accounts that an identity thief has taken over or
that have been created in your name but without your knowledge. You may need to
cancel those accounts, place stop-payment orders on any outstanding checks that
may not have cleared, and change your Automated Teller Machine (ATM) card,
account, and Personal Identification Number (PIN).
Contact the major check
verification companies (listed in the
CalPIRG-Privacy Rights Clearinghouse checklist) if you have had checks
stolen or bank accounts set up by an identity thief. In particular, if you know
that a particular merchant has received a check stolen from you, contact the
verification company that the merchant uses:
- CheckRite -- (800) 766-2748
- ChexSystems -- (800) 428-9623 (closed checking accounts)
- CrossCheck -- (800) 552-1900
- Equifax -- (800) 437-5120
- National Processing
Co. (NPC) -- (800) 526-5380
- SCAN -- (800) 262-7771
- TeleCheck -- (800) 710-9898

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How to prevent
Identity Fraud
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