Non Emergency-(201) 891-2121 Emergency-9-1-1
Non Emergency-(201) 891-2121 Emergency-9-1-1
Immediately call the fraud units of the three credit reporting companies: Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. Report the theft of your credit cards or identity to them. Request that your account be flagged and have a Fraud Alert/Victim Impact statement placed in your credit file asking that creditors call before granting credit. Obtain the names and phone numbers of businesses where fraudulent accounts have been opened, if any. Review your credit report with them and request a copy of the report.
Credit Bureaus
Equifax
Credit Report:
800-997-2493
Fraud Alert:
800-525-6285
Experian
Credit Report:
888-397-3741
Fraud Alert:
888-397-3742
TransUnion
Credit Report:
800-916-8800
Fraud Alert:
800-680-7289
Contact your bank or financial institution and advise them that your identity has been stolen. If a checking or savings account was compromised close the account and open a new one.
If your social security number has been used fraudulently, contact the Social Security Administration at 1-800-269-0271 or through their website at www.ssa.gov/org
Visit the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at www.ic3.gov. It is run by the FBI and serves as a central point for collecting information on internet scams to protect cyberspace and your own personal security. You can also learn about common scams and current consumer alerts to stay on top of current trends.
Identity Theft occurs when someone uses your personally identifying information like your name, Social Security number, or credit card number without your permission to commit fraud or other crimes. According to the Federal Trade Commission, approximately 9 million Americans have their identity stolen each year. Identity thieves may use your personally identifying information to establish lines of credit, bank accounts, credit card accounts and other forms of credit. You may not find out your identity has been compromised until you receive a bill in the mail or are contacted by a debt collector.
Identity Theft is a Crime in the State of New Jersey In New Jersey, Identity Theft is covered by the Wrongful Impersonation statute (N.J.S.A. 2C:21-17), which makes it an offense to impersonate another, assume a false identity, or obtain personally identifying information pertaining to another person and use that information or assist another in using that information to obtain a benefit, services or attempt to avoid a debt or avoid prosecution for a crime by using the name of the other person. New Jersey’s Wrongful Impersonation ranges from a Disorderly Person’s offense to a crime of the 2nd degree in cases where five or more identities have been used to obtain a benefit or service in the amount of $75,000 or more or the identities if five or more people have been used to obtain a benefit.
How does Identity Theft Occur? Your personally identifying information may be compromised through a variety of methods:
1. Dumpster Diving - Looking through your garbage for bills or other paper with your personal information on it.
2. Skimming - Skimmers are small electronic devices that can be easily concealed in a pocket and when your credit card is swiped through it, the device reads all of the information encoded on the magnetic strip on your card.
3. Phishing - Phishing scams are electronic mails sent from what appears to be a legitimate financial institution. They are devised to trick you into sending them account and password information. A common scam would be an email advising you that due to a security issue your bank would like you to confirm or reset your password.
4. Address Change - Your bills are diverted to another address where they are read or your mail is stolen from your mail box.
5. Theft - Your personally identifiable information is acquired through the theft of a wallet, purse, home burglary or car burglary. 6. Pretexting - Your are called or receive a text message from what appears and sounds like a legitimate financial institution in an attempt to trick you into revealing personally identifiable information.
•Order a copy of your credit report every year from all three of the major credit reporting agencies in order to check for any fraudulent activity or discrepancies. In the State of New Jersey you are entitled to one free credit report every year from each of the credit reporting agencies.
•Protect your mail by removing it from your mailbox as soon as possible, and consider utilizing a locked mailbox.
•Shred any discarded paperwork that contains personal identifiers or financial information including pre-approved credit card and loan applications. If a vendor manually processes your credit card, ask for and destroy any carbon copies.
•Know where your personal information is kept and ensure it is secure. Protect your wallet and purse and do not leave them unattended. There have been several cases where thieves access wallets and remove one credit card, but leave the rest of the contents undisturbed. Keep an eye on your credit card when using it to pay purchases.
•Be aware of your surroundings when using ATM cards, making credit card purchases, and when using pin numbers and passwords. Several cases have been uncovered where skimmers are placed into ATM’s capturing ATM data.
•For computer use, make sure you install and keep updated anti-virus software as well as a software firewall to discourage hackers. Be aware that personal information you send over the internet could be viewed by others. Secure your wireless network, and look for the “https:” at the beginning of any web address when you are conducting financial transactions over the internet.
•Carefully review your bills, bank statements, credit card statements and other financial accounts to ensure that your balances and debits match your records. „ When disposing of digital devices such as phones, computers, and iPads, make sure your data has been wiped off of it — this includes modern copiers which may have an internal hard drive. If in doubt, destroy the devices.
•The modern online scams are just updated versions of old con games — DO NOT give out personal information in response to unsolicited offers made in person, on the phone, or over the internet. Banks and other legitimate financial businesses will not ask for your password or personally identifying information when they call you.
•DO NOT provide your social security number unless you have to.
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