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Crime

A Ripe Target For Identity Thieves: Prisoners on Death Row 54

Identity thieves have found an insidious target: death row inmates. A SentiLink report published this week reveals scammers are stealing identities of Texas prisoners awaiting execution to orchestrate "bust-out" fraud schemes -- patiently building credit before disappearing with up to $100,000.

Nearly 10% of Texas' 172 death row inmates have fallen victim. The operation, active since March 2023, exploits inmates' isolation from financial communications. "They wouldn't receive text or email alerts from a financial institution," said Robin Maher of the Death Penalty Information Center.

Beyond opening credit accounts, NBC reports, fraudsters have registered fake businesses using inmates' identities, including a landscaping company created under Ronald Haskell's name -- a man imprisoned since 2014 for killing six people. TransUnion estimates bust-out scams now cost banks $1 billion annually.

A Ripe Target For Identity Thieves: Prisoners on Death Row

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  • by MDMurphy ( 208495 ) on Wednesday May 14, 2025 @01:51AM (#65375273)
    I would go with target, maybe. Victim seem to infer some harrm, which I doubt any of these inmates feel. Well, at least from identity theft.

    I am curious, though. Do death row inmates tend to have excellent credit ratings? What idiot institutions lend money under these circumstances?
    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      If you use the identity of someone on death row then consider yourself being in the queue.

    • Victim seem to infer some harrm, which I doubt any of these inmates feel.

      Under your rationale, you could rape someone in coma. Or steal from a very rich person.

      In the case of death row inmates:
      * they could get out: found innocent (it wouldn't be the first time this happens); or pardoned.
      * they could die, in which case their heirs are harmed.

    • The entire "bust out" scheme is to build the credit rating, then get the credit cards/loans, then disappear. It sounds like this takes the scammers about 2 years to pull off for a person who has no credit history. It would be MUCH harder if the people had credit history in the last 7 years, but these people do not, so they are not starting from a negative, they are starting from zero.
  • by hyades1 ( 1149581 ) on Wednesday May 14, 2025 @02:34AM (#65375313)

    So the scammers are targeting murderers and banks to enrich themselves. Seems kind-a like a victimless crime, n'est-ce pas!

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      Not victimless - the banks will reclaim the costs from the other customers.

      If I exceed the speed limit for a while on an empty road and nobody is hurt, then it's a victimless crime aside from the extra fuel and wear on my vehicle.

      • But how much can they reclaim before they sacrifice their competitive position with respect to other banks? We don't know from the summary, but I wouldn't be surprised if some banks are hit worse than others.

        Besides, it's just too appealing to lump these things together. If we could roll in the US health insurance industry somehow, I'd be truly delighted.

        • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

          Insurances spreads out the cost over the banks.

          If one specific bank is targeted then it could reclaim money by selling off assets. Those assets are usually loans.

          Ultimately the bank could be bought up by a competitor.

          In the end the costs ends up on the interest rates on loans and that's one of the reason for the interest gap between loan and savings accounts.

        • They either have to reclaim the money or take it as a loss. Either way, "they sacrifice their competitive position with respect to other banks".

      • Propagandized.

  • by MeNeXT ( 200840 ) on Wednesday May 14, 2025 @05:54AM (#65375497)

    If it were they would be on death row with the inmate.

    This is bank fraud. Banks are so eager that they skip the due diligence. We need to get back to calling this what it really is and stop allowing banks to create problems for us. There is no such thing as identity theft.

  • Banks should do some due diligence and they wouldn't be caught out so often by fraudsters. More background checks, more random audits, and more in-person interviews with proof of identity / address when people ask for loans, lines of credit or whatever. They won't catch every fraudster but they'll catch more and that would serve as a deterrent. And if particular groups of people are falling victim to identity theft, then maybe the banks should go to the same well - pull the names and dates of birth of these

  • If you put ownership of allowing bad credit on the company issuing the credit, this issue would go away for all in no time. I should be able to contact the creditor and say Its not my debt and the credit issuing company should have to prove its mine not me proving its not. Having and SSN should not be the only proof I am me and the Debt is mine.
  • Sounds like this is a bank problem. Let them eat the cost.

    Fix your user onboarding and KYC processes before you go whining about the risks of issuing predatory debt to people.

  • Same for anyone who is under 18.
    Same for many who are elderly.

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