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  • Identity thieves prey on your mail

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Pasadena Star-News, CA
    Whittier Daily News, CA
    San Gabriel Valley Tribune, CA
    July 4 2005

    Identity thieves prey on your mail

    Authorities urge residents to be on guard with their postal
    deliveries

    By Josh Kleinbaum Staff Writer

    Months after moving from Santa Monica to New York City, a 32-year-old
    woman received a letter from a credit card company thanking her for
    being such a good customer.
    One problem: She never had an account with that company.

    Kris, who asked that her last name not be used, soon received a bill
    saying she owed the company $9,000.

    Like nearly 1,000 Los Angeles residents every month, Kris was a
    victim of identity theft. Someone else opened a handful of credit
    cards in her name and took advantage of her good credit rating,
    accumulating more than $50,000 in debt. Like many identity-theft
    victims, Kris's problem began in her own mailbox.

    "It was a friend of mine, an ex-business partner," Kris said. "I
    moved back East, and he moved into my old apartment. He started
    getting into my old mail. He'd get those applications that they send
    you, open this card now, and he started filling them out."

    Identify theft is one of the fastest-growing crimes in the nation,
    particularly popular among Armenian and Russian organized crime
    groups in Glendale and the eastern San Fernando Valley, officials
    said. With more people shredding their personal information before
    putting it in the trash, some of the culprits -- like Kris' former
    business partner -- find the information necessary to commit the
    crime in a mailbox, before it ever reaches the intended recipient.

    The Los Angeles Police Department receives an estimated 850 to 950
    identity-theft reports per month, including 400 in the San Fernando
    Valley, officials said. Because most identity-theft victims do not
    know how the culprit received their personal information, officials
    don't know what percentage of cases begin with stolen mail, but
    detectives working on identity-theft cases believe the number is on
    the rise.

    "We're seeing more usage of the Postal Service to commit identity
    theft," said Detective John Barragan, who serves on an identity-theft
    task force sponsored by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.

    "People drive up and down, following the mail carrier, looking for
    credit card statements, bank statements, anything with a name, Social
    Security number, date of birth and account number."

    As identity theft has become more commonplace, so has mail theft,
    according to the Postal Inspection Service.

    The service made 6,618 arrests for mail theft in the 2004 fiscal
    year, up from 5,175 two years earlier. Since November, it has made
    4,041 arrests.

    Mail theft "tends to increase during the summer months, because
    people go out of town on vacation," said Postal Inspector Yvonne
    Guerrero. "It's been a bigger problem overall, though."

    In December, a man robbed a postal carrier at gunpoint in Mission
    Hills, taking the carrier's mail. The Postal Inspection Service
    offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to the apprehension
    of the gunman, but he is still at large.

    Mail thieves target homes in the Hollywood Hills and the affluent
    areas of the Valley, officials said, where mailboxes are often at the
    bottom of a driveway, unlocked and out of sight from the house,
    officials said. Identity thieves look for financial statements,
    preapproved credit card applications and anything that might contain
    a check.

    "There are other ways you can make payments than sending a check,"
    said Sheila Gordon, director of victim services for the Identity
    Theft Resource Center. "You become very vulnerable at that point.

    "People can get the routing number off the check and start
    duplicating checks. They're going to look just as authentic. The next
    thing you know, your bank account is drained."

    Gordon and police officials said people should take precautions to
    avoid becoming a victim, such as using locking mailboxes, disposing
    of junk mail in safe places and regularly checking credit reports for
    unusual activity.

    For victims, the theft can turn into a nightmare. Credit ratings can
    be ruined, and many credit companies and collection agencies are
    hesitant to remove items from a credit report.

    "It was a huge headache, dealing with it," Kris said. "I would say it
    was like a full-time job. It took thousands of hours, and it's still
    not resolved."
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