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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. |