Identity Theft
Info
Recent
headlines have shed light on a growing problem,
individuals who retrieve and sell personal information
that a business has collected for legitimate reasons.
Consider the following:
• A former help desk worker used his position at a
credit checking company to obtain the personal information of
thousands of individuals. The worker allegedly conspired with
an accomplice to sell the victims’ credit reports to an
identity theft ring. The ring supplied the pair with the name
and social security numbers of the individuals whose identities
they wanted to steal.
The worker, who
left the company in 2000, allegedly used codes he had
obtained as an employee to access credit reports. He was
also accused of providing access codes and passwords to at
least one cohort who then used the codes to obtain
consumer credit reports.
• A ring of identity thieves targeted a group of
high-ranking executives. A temporary employee working at the
company’s world headquarters obtained personal information
about company executives and then sold it. The information,
including social security numbers and birthrates was used to
obtain credit cards. The police estimated about $100,000 was
charged to the cards.
• The former employee of an insurance company stole a
database containing 60,000 personnel records and sold some of
the private information over the Internet. The suspect posted a
message on an electronic bulletin board announcing that he had
thousands of names and social security numbers for sale.
Further investigation revealed he had also posted the credit
card number of a former supervisor. At the same time, he
allegedly created false e-mail addresses and sent harassing
messages to colleagues.
So how does this happen? An individual can do everything
right, from shredding documents containing sensitive personal
information to monitoring credit reports but the reality is
your personal information is only as safe as the organization
protecting it.
Identity theft occurs when someone uses the identifying
information of another person, such as name or social security
number to commit fraud or engage in other unlawful activities.
While numerous variations of the crime exist, an identity thief
can fraudulently use personal identifying information to, among
other things:
• Open new credit card accounts;
• Take over existing credit card accounts;
• Apply for loans;
• Rent apartments;
• Establish services with utility companies;
• Write fraudulent checks;
• Steal and transfer money from existing bank
accounts;
• File bankruptcy; and
• Obtain employment using the victim’s name.
Identity theft rings have been known to recruit
individuals who work within an organization or they seek
employment themselves in positions where they have access to
personnel records, credit reports or other sources of personal
information. Identity theft rings pay individuals anywhere from
$20-60 an identity.
One major problem with incidents of this nature is some
organizations try to avoid potential embarrassment and negative
publicity by not informing employees or customer that their
personal information may have been compromised.
When whole groups of people are victimized, there are
more clues.
In one case, a
teacher at a middle school complained to a colleague when
bill collectors started calling him at work. Another
teacher who had also been victimized overheard him. When
they began to inquire they soon found out various other
teachers had also been the victims of identity theft.
After checking
credit records four teachers found they had the same
fraudulent address on their credit reports. The identity
thieves had also applied for the same card on almost every
teachers record.
Times have changed
and organizations can no longer take a head in the sand
approach when dealing with identity theft.
Organizations can implement
the following safeguards to prevent identity theft in the
workplace:
• Properly dispose of personal information and other
sensitive material. This could be accomplished by shredding
documents. Do not allow intact documents containing personal
information to be thrown in dumpsters.
• Conduct background checks on all individuals with
access to personal and/or sensitive information, including
cleaning and temporary service.
• Limit the number of temporary agencies your company
uses. If possible, maintain the services of one trusted
firm.
• Develop guidelines to safeguard personal and/or
sensitive information; the guidelines should address issues
such as practices for handling such information
responsibly.
• Train staff on information security issues and
include information on the topic in new employee orientations.
Educate them on why certain information needs protection and
procedures on how to protect it.
• Limit the use of social security numbers in the
workplace. Don’t use the number on items such as employee
identification badges, time cards or paychecks for the whole
world to see. Use alternative numbers.
• Control access to personal information and limit it
to those employees who have a legitimate reason for access.
Audit who looks at what personal information.
• Secure employees’ personal information in a locked
file cabinet or other secure area. Sensitive files stored on
the computer should be password protected and encrypted.
• Implement and enforce password security procedures
for all computer users. Passwords should be changed on a
regular basis.
There are
numerous opportunities to educate employees on identity
theft prevention and the steps to take if they become
victims: new employee orientations, annual staff
orientations, training conferences, workshops, and
departmental meetings are just a few. Brown-bag lunch
training sessions have also been found to be helpful.
Security awareness
could also be increased through the use of posters,
newsletter articles, e-mails, video presentations and
other promotion vehicles such as brochures or booklets
that address identity theft.
Stock
relevant publications and audio-visual programs and make
them accessible to company executives and employees.
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