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Money for Nothing

Don't fall victim to the identity-theft protection scam

The services can't stop that, either.

Another huge problem the services don't prevent is medical identity theft. There's no central reporting agency for medical bills. Davis' boss, Lieutenant Giles Tipsword, says organized theft rings have been getting their hands on Medicare profiles, then selling them to other fraudsters who ran up charges for tens of thousands of dollars of health care.

Above and below, the driver’s licenses that Nevada authorities produced to disprove the claims of identity theft made by the founder of LifeLock.

Just having a criminal use your personal information at all can be a big problem, even if the crook doesn't use the data to steal anything. If police have an arrest warrant with your name on it, you could be arrested the next time you are pulled over for speeding.

Sergeant Davis says he talked to a woman who found out the thief using her identity had caused police to issue multiple warrants for her arrest. Phoenix police had her come down for fingerprinting, then gave her a letter saying she wasn't the wanted criminal who was using her name, date of birth, and Social Security number.

If you are arrested falsely in a case like that — even if you've joined a service company like LifeLock — you'll still have a negative experience to remember.

At a news conference in June, Phoenix police brought out printers, other document-making equipment, and hundreds of checks that came from a single bust of identity theft suspects. The suspects were using personal information from new victims to alter the checks, stolen from a bank vehicle in 2004, in an attempt to cash them.

"There's no foolproof way to stop this," Tipsword says.

So the best advice is: Don't fall prey to identify-protection scams.

Chances are you'll never be targeted by identity thieves. And if you are, there's next to nothing an identity-protection firm could've done to prevent it. Or much it could do to help you solve the problem that you couldn't easily do yourself — at little to no expense.


DIY: FRAUD ALERTS

Placing a fraud alert tells someone loaning money in your name to call you first. Drawback: Might delay an impulsive credit purchase.

Here's how to do it:
Call 1-888-397-3742

This is the number for Experian, one of the major credit reporting bureaus. They'll report the fraud alert to other bureaus.

Calling this number gives you automated options. Here's what to do:
Press 2 (you don't want the "free" offer),
Press 3 (you want the fraud stuff, not more sales offers),
Press 2 (to place an alert),
Press 1 (for initial 90-day fraud alert).
Getting to this stage takes approximately 1 minute; then you punch in your personal identification numbers.

TO GET YOUR CREDIT REPORT
Super-easy and free process: www.annualcreditreport.com
or call 1-877-322-8228

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