woensdag 5 februari 2014
The Koyal Training Group, Identity theft is a nightmare that can ruin lives
LANCASTER — Local law
enforcement officials say identity
theft is a nightmare that can ruin its victims’ lives.
Unfortunately
for Maryanne Sicat, of Lancaster, she is living that nightmare.
“For
the last three years, I’ve been trying to clean up my credit and fix my
finances and rebuild financially because I had my identity taken and used at
several places,” she said.
Sicat
has received bills from stores and utility companies for goods and services she
did not purchase. Also, she was buying a television in 2013 at a big-box store
and her telephone number came up under the name of a California man.
“One
time is OK,” Sicat said. “The second store makes you wonder. But then every
single store that I went to Christmas shopping, it was the same thing. So
that’s why I started checking into it more.”
She
has the name of the person she thinks is using her information but has no idea
how the person got her phone number. So Sicat filed a complaint with the
Federal Trade Commission and the Lancaster Police Department, and she has
become another identity fraud statistic.
The
FTC said identity fraud
is the top complaint it has dealt with in the past 13 years. It received
369,132 such complaints in 2012, or 18 percent of its total complaints.
Identity fraud dwarfed complaints about debt collectors, which was in second
place with 199,721, according to information the FTC provided.
Fairfield
County Sheriff Dave Phalen said there have not been a large number of identity
fraud and identity theft cases locally. However, that is little consolation to
Sicat and others like her.
“Everything’s
on credit,” she said. “So you can’t do anything. You can’t buy anything. It’s
embarrassing, and it’s extremely frustrating because it makes me paranoid. I
don’t trust anybody.”
What is identity
fraud?
Detective
James Nicolia, of the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office, said identity fraud is
when a person uses another’s identity for financial gain or to receive services
illegally.
“If
I were to go and take the sheriff’s name, for example, and get cable or phone
service put into his name for my residence,” he said. “That is identity fraud
and identity theft.”
Nicolia
said a common reason someone becomes a victim is because they are not careful
with their identification.
“You
get a bill in the mail or a credit card offer, you throw in the trash,” he
said. “It makes its way to the trash, and anybody can come along and take it at
that point in time. It’s open property for anybody, and they can get a lot of
your pertinent information that way, obviously. You get those credit offers —
shred it.”
Phalen
said identity thieves also can get information from telephone or email
solicitations. He said thieves are looking for birth dates and Social Security
numbers.
Lancaster
Police Chief Dave Bailey said another scam is when a thief will email someone claiming
they have won a lottery or prize, oftentimes from a foreign country. However,
there is no such prize.
“Before
they’ll release the ‘prize,’ they’ll send you an email, a fraud of course, and
say, ‘You need to pay us $2,200 American to pay for the European tax on your
winnings. We also need your Social Security number, date of birth and your
current address to verify your identity and where to send the check.’
“So
you’ve just sent them $2,000 and you provided them your identifiers. Now they
can get you two ways: They’ve got your cash and they can steal your ID. I don’t
think people think of those things as part of the ID theft process, but they
are.”
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