Identity theft is a term used to refer to fraud that
involves stealing money or getting other benefits by pretending to be someone
else. The term is relatively new and is actually a misnomer, since it is not
inherently possible to steal an identity, only to
use it. The person whose identity is used can suffer various consequences when
they are held responsible for the perpetrator's actions. In many countries
specific laws make it a crime to use another person's identity for personal
gain .
Including several links to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.Types
According to
the non-profit Identity Theft Resource Center, identity theft is sub-divided into
four categories:
- financial identity theft (using
another's identity to obtain goods and services)
- criminal identity theft (posing
as another when apprehended for a crime)
- identity cloning (using
another's information to assume his or her identity in daily life)
- business/commercial identity
theft (using another's business name to obtain credit)
Identity
theft may be used to facilitate crimes including illegal immigration, terrorism, and espionage. Identity theft may also be a means
of blackmail. There are also cases of identity
cloning to attack payment systems, including medical insurance.
Some
individuals may impersonate others for non-financial reasons - for instance, to
receive praise or attention for the victim's achievements. This is sometimes
referred to as identity theft in the media.
Elaboration
Financial identity theft
A classic
example of credit-dependent financial crime (bank
fraud) occurs
when a criminal obtains a loan from a financial institution by impersonating
someone else. The criminal pretends to be the victim by presenting an accurate
name, address, birth date, or other information that the lender requires as a
means of establishing identity. Even if this information is checked against the
data at a national credit-rating service, the lender will encounter no
concerns, as all of the victim's information matches the records. The lender
has no easy way to discover that the person is pretending to be the victim,
especially if an original, government-issued id can't be verified (as is the
case in online, mail, telephone, and fax-based transactions). This kind of
crime is considered non-self-revealing, although authorities may be able to
track down the criminal if the funds for the loan were mailed to them. The
criminal keeps the money from the loan, the financial institution is never
repaid, and the victim is wrongly blamed for defaulting on a loan s/he never
authorized.
In most
cases the financial identity theft will be reported to the national Consumer credit reporting agency or Credit
bureaus (U.S.) as a
collection or bad loan under the impersonated person's record. The victim may
discover the incident by being denied a loan, by seeing the accounts or
complaints when they view their own credit
history, or by
being contacted by creditors or collection
agencies. The
victim's credit
score, which
affects one's ability to acquire new loans or credit lines, will be adversely
affected until they are able to successfully dispute the complaints and have
them removed from their record.
Other forms
of bank fraud associated with identity theft include "account
takeovers", passing bad checks, and "busting out" a
checking or credit account with bad checks, counterfeit money orders, or empty
ATM envelope deposits. If withdrawals or checks are made against the
impersonated person's real accounts, that person may need to convince the bank
that the withdrawal was fraudulent or file a court case in order to retrieve
lost funds. If checks are written against fraudulently opened checking
accounts, the person receiving the checks will suffer the financial loss.
However, the recipient might attempt to retrieve money from the impersonated
person by using a collection agency. This action would appear in the victim's
credit history until it was shown to be fraud.
Identity cloning and concealment
In this
situation, a criminal acquires personal identifiers, and then impersonates
someone for the purpose of concealment from authorities. This may be done by a
person who wants to avoid arrest for crimes, by a person who is working
illegally in a foreign country, or by a person who is hiding from creditors or
other individuals. Unlike credit-dependent financial crimes, concealment can
continue for an indeterminate amount of time without ever being detected.
Additionally, the criminal might attempt to obtained fraudulent documents or
IDs consistent with the cloned identity to make the impersonation even more
convincing and concealed.
Criminal identity theft
When a
criminal identifies himself to police as another individual it is sometimes
referred to as "Criminal Identity Theft." In some cases the criminal
will obtain a state issued ID using stolen documents or personal information
belonging to another person, or they might simply use a fake
ID. When the
criminal is arrested for a crime, they present the ID to authorities, who place
charges under the identity theft victim's name and release the criminal. When
the criminal fails to appear for his court hearing, a warrant would be issued
under the assumed name. The victim might learn of the incident if the state
suspends their own drivers license, or through a background
check performed
for employment or other purposes, or in rare cases could be arrested when
stopped for a minor traffic violation.
It can be
difficult for a criminal identity theft victim to clear their record. The steps
required to clear the victim's incorrect criminal
record depend on
what jurisdiction the crime occurred in and whether the true identity of the
criminal can be determined. The victim might need to locate the original
arresting officers, or be fingerprinted to prove their own identity, and may
need to go to a court hearing to be cleared of the charges. Obtaining an expungement of court records may also be
required. Authorities might permanently maintain the victim's name as an alias
for the criminal's true identity in their criminal records databases. One
problem that victims of criminal identity theft may encounter is that various data aggregators might still have the incorrect
criminal records in their databases even after court and police records are
corrected. Thus it is possible that a future background check will return the
incorrect criminal records.
Techniques for obtaining personal information
In most
cases, a criminal needs to obtain personally identifiable information or documents about an individual in
order to impersonate them. They may do this by:
- Stealing mail or rummaging
through rubbish containing personal information (dumpster diving)
- Retrieving information from
redundant equipment which has been disposed of carelessly, e.g. at public
dump sites, given away without proper sanitizing etc.
- Researching about the victim in
government registers, internet search engines, or public records search
services.
- Stealing payment or
identification cards, either by pickpocketing or surreptitiously by
skimming through a compromised card reader
- Remotely reading information
from an RFID chip on a smart card, RFID-enabled credit card, or passport
- Eavesdropping on public
transactions to obtain personal data (shoulder surfing)
- Stealing personal information
in computer databases (Trojan horses, hacking)
- Advertising bogus job offers
(either full-time or work from home based) to which the victims will reply
with their full name, address, curriculum vitae, telephone numbers, and
banking details
- Infiltration of organizations that store
large amounts of personal information
- Impersonating a trusted
company/institution/organization in an electronic communication to promote
revealing of personal information(phishing)
- Obtaining castings of fingers
for falsifying fingerprint identification.
- Browsing social network (MySpace, Facebook, Bebo etc) sites, online for
personal details that have been posted by users
- Changing your Address therby
diverting billing statements to another location to either get current
legitimate account info or to delay discovery of fraudulent accounts.
Individual identity protection
The
acquisition of personal identifiers is made possible through serious breaches
of privacy. For consumers, this is usually due
to personal naiveté about who they provide their information to. In some cases
the criminal obtains documents or personal identifiers through physical theft
(e.g. vehicle break-ins and home invasions). Guardianship of personal
identifiers by consumers is the most common intervention strategy recommended
by the US Federal Trade Commission, Canadian
Phone Busters and most
sites that address identity theft. Personal guardianship issues include
recommendations on what consumers may do to prevent their information getting
into the wrong hands.
The
strongest protection against identity theft is not to identify at all -
thereby ensuring that information cannot be reused to impersonate an individual
elsewhere. As such, identify theft is often a question of too little privacy or
too much identification. Many activities and organizations in a modern society
require people to provide personal identifiers (Social Security number, national identification number, drivers license number, credit
card number, etc), and in some cases the knowledge of personal identifiers is
treated as proof of identity. This is sometimes done as a convenience or to
enable transactions by telephone or the internet, however it can also make it
more difficult for individuals to protect themselves from identity theft.
In some
cases an identity thief will attempt to impersonate a deceased individual.
Frequently credit checks or other types of verification are not cross
referenced with death certificates, so the crime may go unchecked for some time
unless the deceased's family detects it and takes steps to prevent further
fraud.
Identity protection by organizations
In their May
1998 testimony before the United States Senate, the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) discussed the sale of Social Security numbers and other personal
identifiers by credit-raters and data miners. The FTC agreed to the industry's
self-regulating principles restricting access to information on credit reports. According to the industry, the
restrictions vary according to the category of customer. Credit-rating services
gather and disclosure personal and credit information to a wide business client
base.
Poor
stewardship of personal data by organizations, resulting in unauthorized access
to sensitive data, can expose individuals to the risk of identity theft. The
Privacy Rights Clearinghouse has documented over 900 individual data breaches
by US companies and government agencies since January 2005, which together have
involved over 200 million total records containing sensitive personal
information, many containing social security numbers. Poor corporate diligence standards
which can result in data breaches include:
- failure to shred confidential
information before throwing it into dumpsters
- failure to ensure adequate network security
- the theft of laptop computers
or portable media being carried off-site containing vast amounts of
personal information. The use of strong encryption on these devices can reduce the chance of data
being misused should a criminal obtain them.
- the brokerage of personal
information to other businesses without ensuring that the purchaser
maintains adequate security controls
- Failure of governments, when
registering sole proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations, to
determine if the officers listed in the Articles of Incorporation are who
they say they are. This potentially allows criminals access to personal
information through credit-rating and data mining services.
The failure
of corporate or government organizations to protect consumer
privacy, client confidentiality and political
privacy has been
criticized for facilitating the acquisition of personal identifiers by
criminals.
Using
various types of biometric information, such as fingerprints,
for identification and authentication has been cited as a way to thwart
identity thieves, however there are technological limitations and privacy
concerns associated with these methods as well.
Legal response
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom personal data is protected by the Data Protection Act. The Act covers all personal data
which an organization may hold, including names, birthday and anniversary
dates, addresses, telephone numbers, etc.
Under English
law (which
extends to Wales but not necessarily to Northern Ireland or Scotland), the deception offences under the Theft
Act 1968
increasingly contend with identity theft situations. In R v Seward
(2005) EWCA Crim 1941 the defendant was acting as the
"front man" in the use of stolen credit cards and other documents to
obtain goods. He obtained goods to the value of £10,000 for others who are
unlikely ever to be identified. The Court of Appeal considered sentencing policy
for deception offenses involving "identity theft" and concluded that
a prison sentence was required. Henriques J. said at para 14:"Identity
fraud is a particularly pernicious and prevalent form of dishonesty calling
for, in our judgment, deterrent sentences."
Increasingly,
organizations, including Government bodies will be forced to take steps to
better protect their users' data.
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