A New School Year Brings More Opportunities For ID Theft
By Mark Pribish, Director of
Identity Theft Management Services
Merchants Information Solutions, Inc.
As the school year begins in
many areas of the country during the next few weeks, I was reminded of
how
children can become victims of identity theft – as the
Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) has estimated that about 400,000 children have their identities
stolen
each year.
This reminder
was never more
evident than when my seventh grader and I went shopping for school
supplies
last week and one of the required school items was a minimum 1 gigabyte
flash drive.This
made me think of how school children
today either have (or have access to) cell phones, laptops, PDAs
(Personal
Digital Assistants), and now flash drives -- in addition to the home
computers
of their parents.
I also
thought about my
children’s private information since their social security
numbers are at my
current and former employers (for access to health insurance); at Chase
Bank
related to their savings accounts; at Edward Jones related to their
Virginia
529 savings plans; as well as their school or school systems.And if you use a
professional tax preparer,
like I do, I am fairly certain that your children’s social
security number(s)
can be found in the files of your tax preparer too.
Children can
also be tricked
into giving up personal information in phishing scams ranging from
fraudulent
websites to entering contests – where identity thieves steal
personal
information.
More
recently, some news
articles have highlighted the challenges and pitfalls with children
participating in social networking sites – where personal
safety as well as
personal information is at risk – especially if children are
not educated on
how to keep their information private.
Since
children have no credit
history – or better yet, no negative credit history
– children are targets for
identity thieves and can be a victim for years until they apply for
their first
job as a teenager.One
recommendation
that I always make to family and friends is to check their
children’s credit
report every year.This
can be done at
no cost by going to annualcreditreport.com or by calling each of the
three
credit bureaus.
If a parent
learns that any of
their children are a victim of identity theft, then the parent needs to
contact
each of the three major credit bureaus, file a police report, file an
affidavit
with the FTC, as well as contact the bank or credit issuer to remove
the
child’s name from the fraudulent related record.
So
for many of you, the start
of another school year means buying all kinds of school supplies
including
flash drives.
And for those
parents who are
sending their children back to college (or to college for the first
time), you
may want to add identity theft education to the list of discussion
items as one
more precaution to support your and your children’speace of mind!