Article Sphere Logo
Identity Theft Article

Legal Thriller Author Explores Identity Theft - You Don't Have to be a Victim

By Expert Author: Jack Payne
Word Count: 841 words | Views: 248 view(s)
Your luck doesn't have to be so bad as the California man, who, in a series of unrelated events, was hit by a car on Sunday, mugged on Monday, and shot on Tuesday. But, if you lose your identity to a con man, your foul luck level could be close.

With a con man-launched barrage, stolen identities are rising at a rate of up to 10,000,000 per year, creating a problem that is now approaching crisis proportions.

If we were a fire-eating, Bible-thumping preacher, we would deliver our sermon something like quoting from a legal thriller, something like this:

Con men everywhere are taking rifle-shot focus on a very specific target: your social security number. (Your bank account number would be nice too. That's secondary targeting.) Once obtaining this they are finding it a cake-walk to taking over your paper identity, and, thus, opening up a free-flowing channel to all of your financial assets.

They count on--and are successfully cashing in on--a seemingly human axiom: a one-sided exercise in the "Law of Inertia." So, you must surmount this inertia, conquer it, if it exists.

As never before, if you do not wish to provide the con man a feeding tube into your bank account, you must be highly selective about the handling of your financial affairs. All of them. The time is now.

How?

Here are a few suggestions:

1. When ordering over the internet remember that URLs that begin with "http" are not secure sites. The sites that begin with "https" are. First step is to foil hackers as best you can.

2. Verify all email and telephone offers by checking them out directly through a customer service number you locate, yourself, in your phone book, then follow through with a phone call, only one you initiate. If you can't find a phone number there, call the reference desk of your public library and you will probably have the requested number in minutes.

3. If you suspect an obvious, serious scam--many of which these days read like a legal thriller--don't hesitate, looking for a cause dujour. Contact the FBI or your State Attorney General's office. Do it with cat-quick speed. Famed French World War II hero and President, Charles DeGaulle, had a very forgettable message to leave from his death bed. His last words were, "It hurts." This is the same near-death way you'd feel if, no matter what you'd accomplished in life, a con man cleaned you of your identity.

4. Never reship any product on behalf of a stranger in a foreign country.. If you don't know the contents, which could be stolen goods, you might be unwittingly participating in a crime. You don't want to become a self-indulgent, navel-gazing victim.

5. Never respond to email or phone calls asking you to verify anything. These requests are most often placed by the con man under the guise of being a bank, credit card company, retail store, government agency official--any manner of subterfuge. It's always best to check out the "source" represented, independently of any reference numbers or call-back data provided by the inquirer. You don't have to be a peripheral visionary to see these scams coming. They're frontal. They're clear. Act accordingly.

6. Ignore all "free credit report" offers you receive, either by phone or over the internet. Big majority of these are scams.
Your cooperation would be like singing along at the opera.

7. "Free" gift offers should be avoided. Unless they are entirely free. If asked to "pay only shipping and handling charges," look out. This is a big red light.

8. Pyramid schemes and email chain letters. The answer to this should be obvious. Ignore, ignore, ignore. Never respond to these. The con man's eerie vulgarity, his frothing-at-the-mouth greed, rears its ugly head pronouncedly on this one.

9. Never enter your social security number on a resume, one you are asked to send via email by anyone with whom you are not totally familiar. Some scam-fighters will say, simply enter 000-00-0000, but pause should be exercised before even doing this. If you wish to save yourself from becoming a drooling head-banger, by all means do not let your social security number fall into the hands of a con man.

10. Gift or order confirmations. These, from any vendor you have not contacted. Usually they are "phishing" expeditions, designed only to reel in personal information from you.

These are some of the cautionary high points. Be totally aware that the identity theft threat is now of epidemic proportions. and, sadly, it appears that--like all epidemics--the time-honored "Law of Averages" is about the only governor to dictate the length of time before it gets to you. When it finally hits, the jolt will be like unwittingly sticking your hand into a sealed box of scorpions.
Jack Payne

About the Author:

The Con Man's Blog, and first two chapters of Jack Payne's legal thriller book, Six Hours Past Thursday, are now available online. Both readable for free. You are invited. legalthriller.blogspot.com

Article Source: http://www.articlesphere.com/Article/Legal-Thriller-Author-Explores-Identity-Theft---You-Don-t-Have-to-be-a-Victim/113803

 This Article has been viewed 248 times.
  

Related Videos



 

Related Articles

 
 

Listed below are more articles related to the above article from the "Identity Theft" article category.

People interested in the above article "Legal Thriller Author Explores Identity Theft - You Don't Have to be a Victim" are also interested in the related articles listed below:

 
Identity theft has become a major problem in recent years, and is growing by leaps and bound. Many people feel that it is becoming as epidemic due to large number of people being affected by this crime. It has become very important to safeguard against such crimes, and the best identity theft protection is to take the proactive stance and make it difficult for criminals to access your personal information.
Many people that regularly use the Internet are affected by nagging fear that online transactions are not safe and that anybody can easily steal your credit card information. However, it would be foolish to let these unreasonable fears prevent you from transacting over the Internet because many times it is perfectly safe to transact online.
Of course to prevent yourself from being a victim of identity theft you are going to want to routinely check for fraud identity theft, and more than anything this means checking your credit report. You can do it manually, but you can also take the easy way out and get an automatic identity theft fraud alert.
Identity theft is defined as being a crime that involves the stealing or misrepresenting of another person's information in order to commit other crimes. Any information such as name, address, credit card numbers, and social security numbers can be taken and used to commit identity theft, and this is why you need to pay close attention to your personal information and protect yourself.
Identity theft is a very serious issue in the world today, because it happens so often. In fact, chances are that you already know someone who has dealt with identity theft in the past, and so it is a subject that you should be educated on and really take very seriously.
There are a few steps in particular that you are going to want to take if you want the best identity theft fraud protection. These are possibly the most important steps that you will ever take in your life, as identity theft is now recognized as being one of the most commonly occurring and serious crimes in the world.
There is some kinds of mail that most people do not mind getting and then there is the mail no one wants to get. If you get a notification in the mail that you just won the lottery then you are probably pretty happy. Then there is the kind of mail you get that on the surface is terrible news but then there is good news of some sort in there too.
Article Directory Home All Categories Legal Identity Theft Legal Thriller Author Explores Identity Theft - You Don't Have to be a Victim
 

Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search!
 
Copyright © 2005 - by Larry Lim, Singapore - Article Search Engine Directory at ArticleSphere.com™
All Rights Reserved Worldwide. All Trademarks and Servicemarks are the property of the respective owners.