How To Protect Yourself From Identity Theft

A corporate attorney, with first hand experience of identity theft, sent the following guidelines to the employees in his company. It contains very useful and non-trivial advice and information to protect yourself from identity theft.

  1. The next time you order checks have only your initials (instead of first name) and last name put on them. If someone takes your checkbook, they will not know if you sign your checks with just your initials or your first name, but your bank will know how you sign your checks.
  2. Do not sign the back of your credit cards. Instead, put “PHOTO ID REQUIRED.”
  3. When you are writing checks to pay on your credit card accounts, DO NOT put the complete account number on the “For” line. Instead, just put the last four numbers. The credit card company knows the rest of the number, and anyone who might be handling your check as it passes through all the check-processing channels will not have access to it.
  4. Put your work phone # on your checks instead of your home phone. If you have a PO Box, use that instead of your home address. If you do not have a PO Box, use your work address. Never have your SS# printed on your checks, (DUH!). You can add i t if it is necessary. However, if you have it printed, anyone can get it.
  5. Place the contents of your wallet on a photocopy machine. Do both sides of each license, credit card, etc. You will know what you had in your wallet and all of the account numbers and phone numbers to call and cancel. Keep the photocopy in a safe place. Also carry a photocopy of your passport when traveling either here or abroad. We have all heard horror stories about f! raud that is committed on us in stealing a name, address, Social Security number, credit cards.
  6. When you check out of a hotel that uses cards for! keys (and they all seem to do that now), do not turn the “keys” in. Take them with you and destroy them. Those little cards have on them all of the information you gave the hotel, including address and credit card numbers and expiration dates. Someone with a card reader, or employee of the hotel, can access all that information with no problem whatsoever.

Unfortunately, as an attorney, I have first hand knowledge because my wallet was stolen last month. Within a week, the thieve(s) ordered an expensive monthly cell phone package, applied for a VISA credit card, had a credit line approved to buy a Gateway computer and received a PIN number from DMV to change my driving record information online. Here is some critical information to limit the damage in case this happens to you or someone you know:

  • We have been told we should cancel our credit cards immediately. The key is having the toll free numbers and your card numbers handy so you know whom to call. Keep those where you can find them.
  • File a police report immediately in the jurisdiction where your credit cards, etc., were stolen. This proves to credit providers you were diligent, and this is a first step toward an investigation (if there ever is one). However, here is what is perhaps most important of all (I never even thought to do this.)
  • Call the three national credit reporting organizations immediately to place a fraud alert on your name and Social Security number. I had never heard of doing that until advised by a bank that called to tel l me an application for cr! edit was made over the Internet in my name. The alert means any company that checks your credit knows your information was stolen, and they have to contact you by phone to authorize new credit. By the time I was advised to do this, almost two weeks after the theft, all the damage had been done. There are records of all the credit checks initiated by the thieves’ purchases,! none of which I knew about before placing the alert. Since then, no additional damage has been done, and the thieves threw my wallet away this weekend (someone turned it in). It seems to have stopped them dead in their tracks.

Here are the numbers you always need to contact about your wallet and contents being stolen:

  1. Equifax: 1-800-525-6285
  2. Experian (formerly TRW): 1-888-397-3742
  3. Trans Union: 1-800-680-7289
  4. Social Security Administration (fraud line): 1-800-269-0271

Article courtesy of Joel Bellenson.

Filed under General Law

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3 Responses to “How To Protect Yourself From Identity Theft”

  1. How To Protect Yourself From Identity Theft -Simple Thoughts - Java and Web Technology Blog Says:

    [...] yourself. Quick bookmark at See more articles on How To, Headline News, Life | | RSS 2.0 | Email thisArticle [...]

  2. Hugh Brown Says:

    (2) Do not sign the back of your credit cards. Instead, put “PHOTO ID REQUIRED.”

    I have done this for years, but you should know the downside of this. Some companies will not accept such a credit card. The US Postal Service refuses such cards, insisting that they must have a signature.

    (6) When you check out of a hotel that uses cards for! keys (and they all seem to do that now), do not turn the “keys” in. Take them with you and destroy them. [...]

    This is a debunked story. It is false. Check snopes.com:

    http://www.snopes.com/crime/warnings/hotelkey.asp

  3. Angsuman Chakraborty Says:

    The story isn’t exactly debunked at snopes.com. He only contends that it isn’t as frequent as was believed. In fact he quotes an incident:

    Deputy Attorney General Tracey Brierly saw it with her own eyes in South Lake Tahoe last month.

    Brierly, a deputy attorney general in the Bureau of Consumer Protection, attended a High Technology Crime Investigation Association conference in South Lake Tahoe in late October.

    The speaker asked for volunteers to provide their credit-card style room keys, the ones with the magnetic stripe. Five or six people provided their keys, and the speaker swiped them through a credit card reader.

    “Two of the keys brought up a name and partial address, and another one brought up a name, address and credit card number,” Brierly said. “I had no idea this was even a possibility.”

    Brierly said she didn’t know which hotel keys had the embedded information, saying she typically leaves the key in the room upon checkout, but won’t any more.

  4. Samiullah Says:

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