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You can get detailed advice by calling the
Federal Trade Commission’s ID Theft Clearinghouse toll-free at
877-438-4338 or going to
www.consumer.gov/idtheft. You can also provide information
about your problem, which will help
law enforcement agencies investigate and track ID theft. The FTC
will send you a free booklet, “ID Theft: When Bad Things Happen
To Your Good Name,” or you can get it online. There are other
steps that you might want to take right away.
- If you believe that someone is
using your identity illegally, report the crime to a law
enforcement agency. It isn’t always possible for
agencies to investigate every case, but making an official
“identity theft report” can help you solve problems
resulting from the ID theft. The “identity theft report”
must be a document that subjects the person filing it to
criminal penalties for providing false information. This is
intended to discourage people from filing phony reports to
try to avoid paying legitimate debts, not to prevent
legitimate ID theft victims from reporting the crimes. You
can report the crime to:
- The police department where the
theft occurred
- Your local police
- A state or federal agency,
including the U.S. Postal Inspection Service (do not use
a complaint to the FTC as an official identity theft
report).
- When a financial account is
involved, contact the bank immediately. If your credit
card, debit card, ATM card, or checks have been lost or
stolen, or if you suspect that someone has obtained your
account number for fraudulent purposes, inform the financial
institution promptly and ask what you need to do to protect
your money.
- Know your payment rights. Under
federal law, you are not responsible for more than $50 if
someone uses your credit card without authorization, and
most issuers will remove the charges completely if you
report the problem as soon as you discover it. While your
losses could be greater if someone uses your debit card, the
card issuer may have a policy that offers you more
protection than federal law provides. You can contest checks
that have been used with your forged signature or
unauthorized withdrawals from your bank account.
- Respond quickly to debt collectors.
If debt collectors contact you about accounts opened in
your name or unauthorized charges made to your existing
accounts, respond immediately in writing, keeping a
copy of your letter. Explain why you don’t owe the money and
enclose copies of any supporting documents, such as an
official identity theft report. You have the right to ask
the debt collector for the name of the business that is owed
the debt and the amount owed. And you have the right to ask
that business for copies of the credit applications or other
documents relating to any transactions that you believe were
made by the ID thief.
- Put a fraud alert in your credit
files. This will oblige creditors to take extra
precautions if someone applies for credit in your name to
verify that it’s really you. There are two kinds of fraud
alerts. An “initial fraud alert” does not require you to
provide a copy of an official “identity theft report” and
stays on your credit records for at least 90 days. This is
the kind of alert to use if you think you might be a victim
but you’re not sure – for instance, if you lost your wallet
or you find out that someone has gotten access to the
customer records at a place you do business. An “extended
fraud alert” should be placed when you have reason to
believe that someone has illegally used your identity. You
must provide a copy of an official “identity theft report”
to request an extended fraud alert, which will stay on your
credit records for 7 years. If you put an initial fraud
alert on your files, you can always request an extended
alert later if the situation warrants it. Just contact one
of the three major credit bureaus to place the fraud alert;
it will be shared automatically with the other two: Equifax,
800-525-6285, TDD 800-255-0056,
www.equifax.com; Experian, 888-397-3742, TDD
800-972-0322,
www.experian.com; TransUnion, 800-680-7289, TDD
877-553-7803,
www.transunion.com.
- Get free copies of your credit
reports. When you file a fraud alert, the credit bureaus
will contact you with information about how to get free
copies of your credit reports. If you filed an initial fraud
alert, you are entitled to one free copy of your credit
report from each of the bureaus. If you filed an extended
alert, you will be able to get two copies from each of the
bureaus, one right away and the other within 12 months. This
will help you monitor your account for problems. Since the
information at the credit bureaus may be different, be sure
to get your reports from all three.
- Follow the instructions to dispute
any accounts you didn’t open, charges you didn’t make, or
other information that isn’t accurate. Be specific about
any information that you believe is the result of the ID
theft. You can permanently block that information from your
credit files; you will be asked for a copy of your official
identity theft report to do so. As with fraud alerts, you
only need to report problems with your credit reports to one
of the bureaus, and it will share that information with the
other two (see contact information above).
·
Keep checking your credit report regularly.
A new federal law entitles all consumers to ask each of the
three major credit bureaus for free copies of their reports once
in every 12-month period. This free annual report program
started in late 2004 and is being phased in gradually across the
country, from West to East. Go to
www.ftc.gov/credit or call 877-382-4357 for more details and
to see when you can make your requests. You don’t have to ask
all three credit bureaus for your reports at the same time; you
can stagger your requests if you prefer. Do not contact
the credit bureaus directly for these free annual reports.
They are only available by calling 877-322-8228 or going to
www.annualcreditreport.com. You can make your requests by
phone or online, or download a form to mail your requests.
·
Your state law may also entitle you to free
credit reports. Ask your local consumer protection or state
attorney general’s office. Any rights your state law gives you
are in addition to your rights under federal law.
·
Be cautious about offers for credit monitoring
services. Why pay extra for them when you can get your
credit reports for free or very cheap? Read the description of
the services carefully. Unless you’re a victim of serious and
ongoing identity theft, buying a service that alerts you to
certain activities in your credit files probably isn’t
worthwhile, especially if it costs hundreds of dollars a year.
You can purchase copies of your credit reports anytime for about
$9 through the bureaus’ Web sites or by phone: Equifax,
800-685-111; Experian, 800-311-4769; TransUnion, 800-888-4213. |