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Are
Identity Theft and Identity Fraud Different?
Essentially
identity theft is a crime. Identity theft and identity refer
to all types of crime in which someone wrongfully obtains and uses
another person's personal data in some way that involves fraud
or deception, typically for economic gain.
Unlike
your fingerprints, which are unique to you and are not (generally)
transferable to someone else for their use, your personal data
especially your Social Security number, your bank account or
credit card number, your telephone calling card number, and
other valuable identifying data can be used, if they fall into
the wrong hands, to personally profit at your expense. In the
United States and Canada , for example, many people have reported
that unauthorized persons have taken funds out of their bank
or financial accounts, or, in the worst cases, taken over their
identities altogether, running up vast debts and committing crimes
while using the victim’s
names. In many cases, a victim's losses may include not only
out-of-pocket financial losses, but substantial additional financial
costs associated with trying to restore his reputation in the
community and correcting erroneous information for which the
criminal is responsible.
In
one notorious case of identity theft, the criminal, a convicted
felon, not only incurred more than $100,000 of credit card debt,
obtained a federal home loan, and bought homes, motorcycles,
and handguns in the victim's name, but called his victim to taunt
him --saying that he could continue to pose as the victim for
as long as he wanted because identity theft was not a federal
crime at that time -- before filing for bankruptcy, also in the
victim's name. While the victim and his wife spent more than
four years and more than $15,000 of their own money to restore
their credit and reputation, the criminal served a brief sentence
for making a false statement to procure a firearm, but made no
restitution to his victim for any of the harm he had caused.
This case, and others like it, prompted Congress in 1998 to create
a new federal offense of identity theft.
How
(not) to Facilitate Identity Theft Or Fraud
Many
people do not realize how easily criminals can obtain
our personal data without having to break into our
homes. In public places, for example, criminals may engage in "shoulder
surfing" watching
you from a nearby location as you punch in your telephone
calling card number or credit card number or listen
in on your conversation if you give your credit-card
number over the telephone to a hotel or rental car
company. Even the area near your home or office may
not be secure. Some criminals engage in "dumpster
diving" going
through your garbage cans or a communal dumpster or
trash bin -- to obtain copies of your checks, credit
card or bank statements, or other records that typically
bear your name, address, and even your telephone number.
These types of records make it easier for criminals
to get control over accounts in your name and assume
your identity.
If
you receive applications for "pre-approved" credit
cards in the mail, but discard them without tearing
up the enclosed materials, criminals may retrieve
them and try to activate the cards for their use without
your knowledge. (Some credit card companies, when
sending credit cards, have adopted security measures that allow
a card recipient to activate the card only from his
or her home telephone number but this is not yet
a universal practice.) Also, if your mail is delivered
to a place where others have ready access to it,
criminals may simply intercept and redirect your mail to another
location. In recent years, the Internet has become
an appealing place for criminals to obtain identifying
data, such as passwords or even banking information.
In their haste to explore the exciting features of
the Internet, many people respond to "spam" unsolicited
E-mail that promises them some benefit but requests
identifying data, without realizing that in many
cases, the requester has no intention of keeping
his promise. In some cases, criminals reportedly
have used computer technology to obtain large amounts
of personal data.
With
enough identifying information about an individual, a criminal
can take over that individual's identity to conduct a wide range
of crimes: for example, false applications for loans
and credit cards, fraudulent withdrawals from bank
accounts, fraudulent use of telephone calling cards,
or obtaining other goods or privileges which the
criminal might be denied if he were to use his
real name. If the criminal takes steps to ensure that
bills for the falsely obtained credit cards, or
bank statements showing the unauthorized withdrawals,
are sent to an address other than the victim's,
the victim may not become aware of what is happing until
the criminal has already inflicted substantial
damage on the victim's assets, credit, and reputation.
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