Archive for the ‘Police agencies’ Category

Top U.S. Banker Newest ID Theft Poster Child

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

On August 25th, President Barack Obama nominated Ben Bernanke to another term as chairman of the Federal Reserve.

In a story reported this week by The Economist:

“The decision was widely hailed on Wall Street and in Washington, DC. With few exceptions, politicians and economists lined up to praise Mr. Bernanke and to laud Mr. Obama for keeping him.”

Coincidentally, also on August 25th, Newsweek Magazine reported:

“Last summer, just as he was dealing with the first rumblings of the financial crisis on Wall Street, Bernanke learned that a thief had swiped his wife’s purse-including the couple’s joint check book. Later, someone started cashing checks on the Bernanke family account…”

“The theft of the Bernanke check book-never publicly revealed until now-soon became part of a wide-ranging (and previously underway) identity-theft investigation by the Secret Service and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.”

The shocking news is that the “previously underway” investigation exposed what the Justice Department calls “the largest alleged credit and debit card data breach ever charged in the United States.”

Many of the highest profile breaches in U.S. history are allegedly the result of this one mastermind’s activity. Thankfully, the ringleader and two of his co-conspirators are behind bars now.

Victims of the crime-spree reportedly include:

  • Heartland Payment Systems
  • Supermarket chain Hannaford Brothers
  • 7-Eleven stores
  • DSW shoe stores
  • TJ Maxx stores

This is a wake up call for America. If brazen purse snatchers can swipe cash from our top banker’s checking account and hackers can swipe “protected” corporate data with impunity, then the average American continues to remain vulnerable beyond belief.

Protecting your mail, private pins , personal data, passwords, payment instruments (credit/debit cards, checks) and computer data is YOUR responsibility. Despite our best efforts, the portability of data outside of our control, leaves us all exposed in this digital world.

This truth-is-stranger-than-fiction story illustrates another truth. Without the dedicated and ongoing effort of law enforcement, your personal, medical or bank records are just as vulnerable as an attractive unattended purse, slung over the back of a chair at the local Starbucks.

Identity Theft Tops LA County Sheriff's Agenda

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, weighed in this week on the growing need for reshaping federal law in the local fight against crimes involving identity issues.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Sheriff Baca traveled to Washington, DC to testify before a Senate panel on the matter.  At issue is whether the Real ID act, passed in 2005 should be revised to allow individual states more flexibility in order to comply with federal deadlines.

The Times reported:

Baca, who leads the largest sheriff’s department in the nation — with more than 18,000 officers and staff — said he hoped to express the  “critical need” for national ID standards from a local law enforcement perspective… He noted that local law enforcement personnel are typically the first to experience suspicious activities and respond to any terrorist event and that local law enforcement routinely deals with counterfeit identification, often impossible to detect.”

Sheriff Baca supports a revision of the current REAL ID Act, which essentially creates a national identification card for US citizens and puts those without one under greater scrutiny and suspicion.

One of the challenges is that the cost of implementation could run as high as $11 billion over five years according to the National Conference of State Legislators.

Both Baca and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano have expressed support for a revision called PASS ID, which she claims would eliminate the need for states to spend money on untested technologies while including consumer privacy protection assurances.

Sheriff Baca testified that PASS ID is more realistic than REAL ID and he backed Napolitano’s core belief that these revisions to REAL ID are critical to improving identification security.

In a post 9/11 world, realism and improvement should be non-negotiable.

Advice to Identity Thieves: "Don't Target Cops!"

Monday, June 8th, 2009

This story hits close to home for me because it mirrors an incident in my own experience.

Sooner or later, a criminal’s luck runs out. That’s what happened to a group of identity thieves who recently bit off more than they could chew.

The Associated Press reported this week that a ring of counterfeit check scammers got themselves into a mess that could keep them on ice for quite some time, at the expense of the taxpayers in the state of Oregon.

Most police agencies have one person who is considered their “go-to” expert on certain types of cases. In this case the cop is Barbara Glass. She is a veteran police officer who has nearly 20 years of service under her utility belt.

According to the report, Glass has served all those years:

” including eight specializing in ID and fraud investigations. During her investigation into the check ring, she got an e-mail from a Safeway store to alert her that her name had showed up as the signee on one of the bogus checks (that was) passed.”

I was immediately reminded of the value of some type of early warning, late warning, any warning that can inform a victim that they have been compromised. Most consumers have done NOTHING to erect an early warning system for themselves.

Many people who have purchased some type of identity theft protection are still vulnerable to ongoing abuse. Unlike the timely and coincidental email from Safeway in this case, most of us have no form of notification or early warning set up for us until it’s too late.

Officer Glass told The Oregonian newspaper that she nearly fell off her chair.  Glass recalls shouting out to her partner, Officer Dave Staab “My name!” Her full name was handwritten on a fake check and cashed back in April.

This story hits close to home because I remember the day my wife and I had the same conversation. Counterfeit checks were presented and cashed all over town with our bank information and a signature that wasn’t even close to mine.

In my case, the culprits were never identified, but due to the police work of Officers Glass and Staab, the Multnomah County Deputy District attorney will soon have a case to prosecute.

Thanks to some inspired police work, three suspects have had the spotlight shined on thier own identities and are now awaiting their day in court.

I don’t think a check payable to the bailiff will get them off the hook this time.