The
FBI has called it "The fastest growing crime in America."
Close to 10 million Americans every year are victimized by it and
the costs are estimated at 50 billion dollars annually. Many criminals
get off easy while the victims spend years working to restore their
damaged credit reports and reputations. Worse yet, there seems to
be no end in sight.
"The
popularity of the crime is simply growing faster than the solutions
to stop it" many experts conclude. The task of recovery is
so time consuming and tedious, multiple states have resorted to
creating "Identity Theft Passports" for victims in an
attempt to ease the pain for them as they endure the lengthy and
frustrating clean up process.
By
the end of this article I will share with you the secrets of making
yourself virtually identity theft proof in 60 minutes or less (for
free). I use the term "secrets" because less than 1% of
the country are aware of these techniques (let alone practicing
them).
If
Americans took these preventative steps up to 99% of all identity
theft would be eliminated. However, "why" this beneficial
approach is not being made common knowledge in the mainstream media
is something I will not disclose in this article (more on that another
time). For the moment I believe the biggest crime one can commit
is to not share this information with their friends and family (by
the end of this article you will understand why).
Unlike
other authors covering this subject I will not insult your intelligence
by sharing common sense tips like "Dont carry your SSN
Card or ATM PIN# in your wallet or purse" or "Keep all
data sensitive documents like credit card and bank statements locked
up in your home or office". This is elementary advice at best.
The key to protecting yourself from identity theft is to look at
what the masses are doing and then do the opposite (to say the
least).
Almost
70% of Americans are now shredding all their mail and documents
and many are even subscribing to credit monitoring services or buying
identity theft insurance in an attempt to protect themselves from
becoming victims. While this is better than doing nothing its
a far cry from TRUE security.
Study
The Past To Predict The Future
Contrary
to popular belief statistics show the majority of identity theft
does NOT result from the internet as most consumers have been led
to believe. In fact, less than 10% of identity theft cases (where
data compromise can be determined) originated online. In almost
50% of cases consumers are the ones who detect
the breach. In nearly 40% of cases the criminal was someone who
was in close contact with the victim (friend, relative, neighbor,
coworker, in-home employee, waiter/waitress or financial institution
employee). In then end, nearly one third of identity theft cases
come from a stolen wallet/purse, checkbook or credit card.
More
interesting, the age of the primary victim has lowered. If you are
between the age of 25 to 34 you are now the largest target for the
crime (65+ has become the smallest). The bad news is that while
identity theft nationwide is on the decline (8.9 million victims
last year down from 9.3 million in 2005) the dollar amount per victim
is going up ($6,383 last year, up from $5,885 in 2005) and so are
the number of hours victims spend cleaning up the mess (40+ hours
last year, up from 28 hours in 2005).
Weve
all heard the saying "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound
of cure". Yet, no one is practicing it in the pandemic of identity
theft. Credit monitoring is nice but only 11% of consumers ever
catch identity theft through this means. Identity Theft Insurance
(according to many experts) is even more of a hoax. A product marketed
by playing on the fears of American consumers which does nothing
more than assist them in cleaning up the mess only AFTER their identity
has been stolen.
A
Different Approach
The
following is a completely different approach to preventing and protecting
yourself from identity theft. It is based on the reality that we
live in a world now where there is zero privacy of personal data.
Meaning that your name, address, phone number, social security number,
date of birth (even your mothers maiden name) can be obtained by
ANYONE for a fee.
If
youre one who feels this is paranoid thinking let me tell
you about Amy Boyer. In 1999 Miss Boyer had an old high school classmate
(Liam Youens) come back into her life many years later. Mr. Youens
obtained Amys SSN and other personal information after paying
Docusearch Inc. $150. After Youens shot Miss Boyer to death he then
turned the gun on himself. Today the company tells visitors to its
website that "not all
searches are available to the public" and some are reserved
for the investigative and legal industry. Hows that for homeland
security?
With
this "different" approach we break down identity theft
into two distinct categories. 1.) Basic Identity Theft, and 2.)
Credit Hijacking. By definition "Basic Identity Theft"
is when the perpetrator steals your identity and then uses it to
obtain NEW credit accounts for their personal gain. "Credit
Hijacking" falls under a criminal stealing your identity in
order to access and use your EXISTING credit accounts. Each type
of fraud is different and therefore so is your plan of defense.
BASIC
ID THEFT DEFENSE: The best proactive defense against basic identity
theft is through the placing of an "Initial Fraud Alert"
on all three of your credit reports. This "Initial Fraud Alert"
accomplishes three important factors: 1.) Your name and personal
information can no longer be sold by the credit bureaus to ANY third
parties for any marketing purpose (i.e. credit card offers, loan
solicitations or credit pre screenings). 2.) No one can be approved
for credit with your personal information until the creditor personally
calls you at the telephone number you list on your consumer credit
report. And, 3.) Requesting this initial fraud alert entitles you
to a free copy of all three of your credit reports (one copy from
each of the three major credit reporting agencies). Please be advised
that this is an "Initial Fraud Alert" which lasts only
90 days. To extend the fraud alert and obtain the above mentioned
benefits for 7 years you will need to write to each credit bureau
at the address provided within your initial fraud alert confirmation
letter (Note: It is likely credit bureaus will make the extended
alert harder to obtain as a great deal of their revenue comes from
the third party rental and sale your information).
CREDIT
HIJACKING DEFENSE: Most online merchants now utilize a security
feature known as "Address Verification Service" or "AVS".
AVS is a security feature for online merchants allowing
them to only authorize credit card transactions for merchandise
to be shipped to the same address which appears on the consumers
credit card billing statement. If the address does not match that
of the credit card billing statement the transaction will automatically
be declined. In other words, if someone gets your credit card number,
expirations date and CVV code (the three digit code on the back
of the card) the only way a transaction can be authorized online
is if the merchandise if shipped to the SAME address that your credit
card billing statement is currently sent to. This is what makes
credit hijacking so dangerous. When a criminal hijacks your credit
they call up the banks (posing as you) and change your address on
your credit cards with your personal information (i.e. last for
of SSN and mothers maiden name) as if you were moving. They then
proceed to order thousands of dollars in merchandise (online or
over the phone) to be shipped to the "new" address. Because
they changed "your address" on yourb credit cards they
will bypass the AVS security from online merchants and the charges
will be approved.
The
only real defense against credit hijacking is to establish a personal
security code with all your bank accounts and credit cards. This
is a form of security which goes beyond your SSN, Zip Code, Date
of Birth or Mothers Maiden Name to give you a whole new tier of
personal security. This is a unique number or group of letters and
numbers which you create and give to every credit card provider
you have. For example. The number could be as simple as "JACOB2801"
which is a combination of your best friend as child and the numerical
address of the home you lived in growing up. By establishing this
auxiliary passcode with all your credit card providers no one will
be granted access to your
accounts without it providing it to them. Since you are the only
one who knows it and it is non public it is truly secure. I have
yet to find a credit card company which will not allow you to create
a such a passcode and added layer of security.
Summary:
So
now with the initial fraud alert established on your credit reports
(and later extended) as well as the personal security code set up
with all your bank and credit card accounts, you are virtually identity
theft proof in under 60 minutes for free. Sure, someone can always
"steal" your identity but the real joke will be on them.
If they try to open a new credit account anywhere in the country
the creditor is going to have to call YOU at the phone number listed
on your report in before it can be approved and its GAME OVER.
If they try to hijack your credit by changing the address on your
credit accounts they will be asked for not only the last four digits
of your SSN and mother maiden name, but also your personal security
code which they will NOT know and again its, GAME OVER.
Please
understand that this article deals only with the topic of
"financial" identity theft which is by far the most prevalent
today. However, you should be aware you also have the following
"5 MAJOR" identities in computers across the nation which
are your: 1.) Driving Records/History (DMV Databases). 2.) Medical
Records/History (Medical Information Bureau Database). 3.) Social
Security Records/History (SSA Database). 4.) Insurance
Claims/History (C.L.U.E. Database). 5.) Criminal, Legal and Public
Record databases from birth records and real estate deeds to corporations,
trusts and court cases. Yes, we are in the information age but all
information is stored in databases. I think we are now living in
the database age.
Copyright 2007 All Rights Reserved Article by: Jay
Peters