US Passport Agency Contractor Stole Applicants' Data To Steal Their Identities 45
An anonymous reader writes: According to federal prosecutors three women are responsible for an identity theft and wire fraud scheme targeting both the Houston and Atlanta passport agencies. Chloe McClendon, Alicia Myles, and Dominique Thomas are accused of stealing personal information from the passport administration and transmitting it back and forth between one another. The stolen information was used to obtain lines of credit in order to purchase iPhones, iPads and other electronics. The scheme went on for over five years.
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A good solution would be to stop calling instances like this "identity theft" (a person has had their identity "stolen") and instead call it what it is; "identity fraud" (a company has been fooled into thinking a thief is someone else and given them money).
Once it's clearer that the victim is the company, and not the person, then they might start taking the process of handing out money a bit more care over ensuring that people are who they claim to be.
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As someone who had his Identity stolen/used, I can attest that the person is a victim also. I was lucky, relatively speaking. The thieves opened a credit card in my name, using my name, address, DOB, and SSN. (Interestingly, they got Mother's Maiden Name wrong, but that didn't raise any red flags.) They paid for rush delivery of the card and THEN changed the address. (Second red flag missed: Immediately changing the address to a different state right after opening the card.) Due to a quirk in processi
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After twice asking Bank of America to stop sending the stupid "convenience checks" linked to our credit card, someone stole some out of the mail box and wrote a $996 check. We got it canceled, and found out that they chose that amount because over $1000 was a felony and the police won't bother investigating misdemeanor fraud. BoA cancelled our card and reissued new ones immediately, but my wife was in Peru. I tried to stop or delay the cancellation but their customer service person said that it was requi
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The one time I was contacted about having some huge credit card bill that was late by s
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I would say that the "person" is not the victim, except that in the process of stealing the money, they identity fraudster also ruins the person's credit, making it impossible or just very hard to correct.
If somebody steals money from a bank, but also causes me to lose the ability to borrow money to good interest rates for years, while I must spend countless hours trying to fix information about myself by dealing with various bureaucracies with no real motivation to help me, then I am also a victim.
In a lot
A private contractor (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A private contractor (Score:5, Insightful)
For the record, i don't have a passport... and i'm not such a fucking idiot that i think the government is going to come shoot me because i don't. I swear, peoples IQ must have dropped by 50 points in the last 30-40 years or so. There's just that many more fucking idiots than i remember while growing up.
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Even the passport office isn't corruption free. (Score:1)
Imagine the back door dealings bonanza the anti-privacy industry will provide.
Just look at the nuclear missiles rotting away in staffed-by-stoners facilities today. The government may (MAY) be sort of secure, keeping your info available only for high level thugs to play with, (the kind of people who steal your money with much more sophisticated schemes than robbing you of your wallet), but one day some lame hood with tattoos on his neck will be helping himself.
Why, why, why. (Score:3)
What possible reason is there for the passport office to need to expose this information outside the agency?
How can it possibly be worth the risk, even if there is some minor function which they outsourced to the
fraudsters.
The gummint ought to be forced to do an analysis of the risk and value before the outsource a function
which provides this kind of access to the data of citizens. Private companies might do well also to do it.
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But who background checks the background checkers?
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Why the contractors? (Score:1)
Why commission contractors to handle tasks that are really the remit of government? Especially when you consider that there are thousands of government agencies, many of which are doing things that are highly questionable or even entirely not the proper remit of government.
IRS e-file risk (Score:3)
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Have said this many times ... (Score:2)
The biggest risks to us isn't us, it's the clowns they hire ostensibly to keep us safe.
The cops. The TSA agents. Customs agents. The baggage claims people. The people who processes passports.
All of these people have FAR more access to really make a mess and break the law.
So, as usual, the watchers are the ones who aren't watched nearly enough and who do the most damage. The rest of us get treated like cattle, and they never find anything.