Chadstroma
Footballguy
https://abc7chicago.com/identity-theft-protection-ftc-social-security/7896442/
A heads up- I have noticed this personally. My wife was recently a victim of unemployment fraud as well as a couple of other extended family members in the last month or so. Essentially, their info is used to file unemployment claims. Pretty simple. The frustrating this is it is very hard to stop or even monitor. My wife and others found out because their employer notified them.
In the end, with all the data breaches over the years, it isn't a question of if you will be a victim of ID theft, it is a question of when.
I would suggest signing up with an ID theft protection service. The monthly cost is well worth it to prevent, monitor and help clean up any issues you may end up having. This is what I do (should have done for my wife too).
In the very least, I would suggest signing up with Credit Karma or Credit Sesame if you do not have a free service available otherwise. I am not a huge fan of either and you will be spammed like crazy from them trying to sell you things but it does offer a free way to somewhat monitor your credit and thus your ID. They only monitor two of the three bureaus so I would also once a year check AnnualCreditReport.com as you are allowed one report once a year which will allow you access to all three credit bureaus. Obviously review for any unauthorized tradelines on the report but also any wrong info as well. If you go the Credit Karma/Credit Sesame route, be sure to do the AnnualCreditReport.com once a year so you are keeping an eye on that third credit bureau as well.
If you end up a victim of unemployment fraud. It is important that you act fast to protect yourself. Do the following right away:
A heads up- I have noticed this personally. My wife was recently a victim of unemployment fraud as well as a couple of other extended family members in the last month or so. Essentially, their info is used to file unemployment claims. Pretty simple. The frustrating this is it is very hard to stop or even monitor. My wife and others found out because their employer notified them.
In the end, with all the data breaches over the years, it isn't a question of if you will be a victim of ID theft, it is a question of when.
I would suggest signing up with an ID theft protection service. The monthly cost is well worth it to prevent, monitor and help clean up any issues you may end up having. This is what I do (should have done for my wife too).
In the very least, I would suggest signing up with Credit Karma or Credit Sesame if you do not have a free service available otherwise. I am not a huge fan of either and you will be spammed like crazy from them trying to sell you things but it does offer a free way to somewhat monitor your credit and thus your ID. They only monitor two of the three bureaus so I would also once a year check AnnualCreditReport.com as you are allowed one report once a year which will allow you access to all three credit bureaus. Obviously review for any unauthorized tradelines on the report but also any wrong info as well. If you go the Credit Karma/Credit Sesame route, be sure to do the AnnualCreditReport.com once a year so you are keeping an eye on that third credit bureau as well.
If you end up a victim of unemployment fraud. It is important that you act fast to protect yourself. Do the following right away:
- Report the fraud to your employer. Keep notes on who and when you talked to.
- Report the fraud to your state unemployment benefits agency. Keep notes on who and when you talked to as well as any confirmation or case numbers.
- File a police report.
- Visit IdentityTheft.gov It is a good resource to help you report and steps to recover.
by government and even private enterprise. For example, banks will not do anything even when someone is caught in fraud unless the dollar amount is a certain number because the cost of pursuing charges etc is deemed too much. I worked for a bank's fraud department for a couple of years a while back and it was frustrating to me. I kept making the argument that if they invested in the short term to go after the smaller dollar amount of fraud then they would quickly get a reputation among the fraudsters to avoid them and it would pay off in the long run. With government it is a flood of fraud in some many different ways and areas. Of course, being governement, they do a piss poor job of doing simply things that would prevent it and basically nearly nothing to investigate/prosecute.