Title: SECU Credit Union Identity Theft
1SECU Credit UnionIdentity Theft
2Could this happen to you?
- Missing mail/bank statements
- Unauthorized credit card charges
- Collection calls
- Telephone call concerning approved or denied
credit
3You could be the victim of Identity
Theft.Did you know that 60 of victims
dont know how their identity was stolen?
4What Will They Do??
- Change your address
- Open new credit cards, bank accounts
- Cell phone
- File Bankruptcy
- Buy a Car
- Get a Drivers License
- Get a Job/ file a tax return
- Give your name during arrest
5Then What Happens?
- Job Opportunities
- Loans (education, housing, car)
- Get Arrested!
6How is your identity stolen?
- Mailbox
- Family and Friends
- Co-workers
- Your home
- Credit card offers
- Stolen purse or wallet
- Trash
-
7How is your identity stolen?
- Sharing personal information
- Info obtained through telephone solicitations
- Phishing- Thieves pretend to be financial
institutions or companies and send spam or pop-up
messages to get you to reveal your personal
information.
8How are you affected?
- Unsuspected bills
- Bad credit
- Monetary losses
- Time and stress
9What you should do if you become a victim
- File police report
- Contact credit union/bank
- Contact credit card companies
- Contact local post office
10What you should do if you become a victim
- Contact Social Security Administration Fraud
1-800-269-0271 (Open 10-4) - Contact the major credit bureaus and add either a
90 day fraud alert to your credit report or an
extended fraud alert which lasts for 7 years (you
may need to provide more info) - File a complaint with the Federal
TradeCommission (FTC.GOV) 1-877-FTC-HELP
11What happens if the thief is caught?
- Penalties Federal Crime
- Identity Theft Assumption Deterrence Act (1998)
- Imprisonment for up to 25 years, fines
forfeiture of property - Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act (2004)
- Consecutive sentences for aggravated Identity
Theft without probation
12How to Protect Your Identity
- Promptly remove mail from mailbox
- Order free credit report annually
- Stop newspapers and mail when on vacation
- Reconcile bank/credit card statements (know your
billing cycle)
13How to protect your identity
- Do not give out pin numbers
- Stop telemarketers (donotcall.gov)
- Be careful of disclosing personal info over the
phone, via the Internet, on applications or
through mail (scams) - Store items that have account numbers in a secure
place or shred (Diamond Cut shredders are the
best.)
14How to be prepared
- DO
- Be aware of scams. Be cautious of any calls
asking for personal information - Limit the amount of mail received by using direct
deposit and online banking - Do not leave your personal information sitting
out for others to see - Use Strong Passwords (1LFHA6c) I love Felix,
hes a good cat
15FYI
- In cases where the method of identity theft was
known, 79 of information was obtained offline
versus only 11 obtained online. - Derived from Card Services for Credit Unions
16How to be prepared
- DO
- Make copies (of both sides) and keep in a safe
place - credit cards
- drivers license
- financial institution's information
- medical cards- sometimes have SSN
- any personal identifications
17How to be prepared
- DO NOT
- Leave receipts at teller/store counters, ATMs,
gas stations - Include your SSN or drivers license number on
checks Have only your initials (instead of
first name) and last name put on them. (If
someone takes your checks they will not know how
you sign your checks but your financial
institution will know because they have your
signature card.)
18How to be prepared
- Place outgoing mail in unsecured boxes
- Carry more credit cards IDs than
- necessary
- Carry your Social Security Card in your
- wallet
- Write your complete credit card or account
- number in the For or Memo line instead
- but the last four numbers
19College Students
- Nationwide survey results conducted by Impulse
Research on behalf of Chubb Group of Insurance
Companies found - 49 of college students receive credit card
applications on a daily or weekly basis - 30 of college students throw out these
solicitations without destroying them
20College Students
- When asked how often they reconcile their credit
card and checking accounts Nearly 58 of
students said rarely or never. - Although federal law prohibits the practice,
almost half of the respondents (48) said that
their teachers still publicly post grades using
social security numbers for identification.
21Seniors
- Nearly 1/3 of all telemarketing fraud victims are
age 60 or older - AARP studies show that older telemarketing fraud
victims dont realize that the voice over the
phone could belong to someone who is trying to
steal their money.
22For Everyone
- Red Flags
- A promise that you can win money, make money, or
borrow money easily - A demand that you act immediately or else miss
out on this great opportunity - A refusal to send you written information before
you agree to buy or donate - An attempt to scare you into buying something
- Insistence that you wire money or have a courier
pick up your payment - Derived from Fraud.org
23For Everyone
- You must dispute billing errors within 60 days
after the bill containing the error was mailed to
you. Complain by certified letter, return receipt
requested and mail it to the issuers address for
billing inquiries not the payment address. - If you have disputed an item on your credit card
the issuer cant impose finance charges on it so
only pay the charges not in dispute.
24For Everyone
- Avoid filling out contest entry forms
- Ask companies you do business with not to share
your information with other marketers. - Pick up boxed checks, do not have them mailed.
- Derived from Fraud.org
25Helpful Phone Numbers
- Credit Bureau Opt-Out-Line for credit and
insurance related offers 888-567-8688
www.optoutprescreen.com - Experian Opt-Out for non-credit offers
402-458-5247 - Credit Bureaus
- Equifax 1-800-685-1111 or Fraud 1-888-766-0008
- Experian 1-888-397-3742
- TransUnion 1-800-888-4213
- www.annualcreditreport.com 1-877-322-8228
26More helpful information
- Direct Marketing Association
- Remove your name from telemarketing and mail
lists of major companies (youll still hear from
them if you are current customer). - For telemarketing lists, write to Telephone
Preference Service, DIRECT MARKETING ASSOCIATION,
P.O. BOX 282, CARMEL NY 10512 or go to
http//www.dmaconsumers.org/cgi/offtelephonedave.
Include your phone number. - For mail lists, write to MAIL PREFERENCE
SERVICE, DIRECT MARKETING ASSOCIATION, P.O. BOX
282, CARMEL NY 10512 http//www.dmaconsumers.org/c
gi/offmailinglistdave. - National Fraud Information Center
- Get advice about telemarketing offers and report
suspected fraud through this hotline operated
M-F, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., by the National Consumers
League, 800-876-7060, www.fraud.org.
27Helpful Websites
- www.consumer.gov/sentinel
- www.ftc.gov
- www.fraud.org
- www.privacyrights.org/
- www.oag.state.md.us/Consumer/index.htm (Consumer
Protection Division in Maryland)
28Thank you! SECU Credit Union SecuMd.org 1-800-879-
7328