Pretexting: Your Personal 
			Information Revealed 
			
			When you think of your own personal 
			assets, chances are your home, car, and savings and investments come 
			to mind. But what about your Social Security number (SSN), telephone 
			records and your bank and credit card account numbers? To people 
			known as “pretexters,” that information is a personal asset, too.
			
			Pretexting is the practice of getting 
			your personal information under false pretenses. Pretexters sell 
			your information to people who may use it to get credit in your 
			name, steal your assets, or to investigate or sue you. Pretexting is 
			against the law.
			
			How 
			Pretexting Works
			Pretexters use a variety of tactics to get your personal 
			information. For example, a pretexter may call, claim he’s from a 
			survey firm, and ask you a few questions. When the pretexter has the 
			information he wants, he uses it to call your financial institution. 
			He pretends to be you or someone with authorized access to your 
			account. He might claim that he’s forgotten his checkbook and needs 
			information about his account. In this way, the pretexter may be 
			able to obtain personal information about you such as your SSN, bank 
			and credit card account numbers, information in your credit report, 
			and the existence and size of your savings and investment 
			portfolios.
			
			Keep in mind that some information 
			about you may be a matter of public record, such as whether you own 
			a home, pay your real estate taxes, or have ever filed for 
			bankruptcy. It is not pretexting for another person to collect this 
			kind of information.
			
			There Ought 
			to Be a Law — There Is
			Under federal law — the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act — it’s illegal for 
			anyone to: 
			
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				use false, fictitious or 
				fraudulent statements or documents to get customer information 
				from a financial institution or directly from a customer of a 
				financial institution.
 
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				use forged, counterfeit, lost, or 
				stolen documents to get customer information from a financial 
				institution or directly from a customer of a financial 
				institution.
 
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				ask another person to get someone 
				else’s customer information using false, fictitious or 
				fraudulent statements or using false, fictitious or fraudulent 
				documents or forged, counterfeit, lost, or stolen documents.
				
 
			
			
			The Federal Trade Commission Act also 
			generally prohibits pretexting for sensitive consumer information.
			
			The Link to 
			Identity Theft
			Pretexting can lead to identity theft. Identity theft occurs when 
			someone hijacks your personal identifying information to open new 
			charge accounts, order merchandise, or borrow money. Consumers 
			targeted by identity thieves often don’t know they’ve been 
			victimized until the hijackers fail to pay the bills or repay the 
			loans, and collection agencies begin dunning the consumers for 
			payment of accounts they didn’t even know they had.
			
			According to the Federal Trade 
			Commission (FTC), the most common forms of identity theft are:
			
				
				Credit Card Fraud — a 
				credit card account is opened in a consumer’s name or an 
				existing credit card account is “taken over”;
				Communications Services Fraud — the identity thief 
				opens telephone, cellular, or other utility service in the 
				consumer’s name; 
				Bank Fraud — a checking or savings account is opened in 
				the consumer’s name, and/or fraudulent checks are written; and
				
				Fraudulent Loans — the identity thief gets a loan, such 
				as a car loan, in the consumer’s name. 
			
			
			The Identity Theft and Assumption 
			Deterrence Act makes it a federal crime when someone: “knowingly 
			transfers or uses, without lawful authority, a means of 
			identification of another person with the intent to commit, or to 
			aid or abet, any unlawful activity that constitutes a violation of 
			federal law, or that constitutes a felony under any applicable state 
			or local law.”
			
			Under the Identity Theft Act, a name 
			or SSN is considered a “means of identification.” So is a credit 
			card number, cellular telephone electronic serial number or any 
			other piece of information that may be used alone or in conjunction 
			with other information to identify a specific individual. 
			
			
			Protect 
			Yourself
			Even though the laws are on your side, it’s wise to take an active 
			role in protecting your information.
			
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				Don’t give out personal 
				information on the phone, through the mail or over the Internet 
				unless you’ve initiated the contact or know who you’re dealing 
				with. Pretexters may pose as representatives of survey firms, 
				banks, Internet service providers and even government agencies 
				to get you to reveal your SSN, mother’s maiden name, financial 
				account numbers and other identifying information. Legitimate 
				organizations with which you do business have the information 
				they need and will not ask you for it.
 
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				Be informed. Ask your financial 
				institutions for their policies about sharing your information. 
				Ask them specifically about their policies to prevent 
				pretexting.
				
 
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				Pay attention to your statement 
				cycles. Follow up with your financial institutions if your 
				statements don’t arrive on time.
 
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				Review your statements carefully 
				and promptly. Report any discrepancies to your institution 
				immediately.
 
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				Alert family members to the 
				dangers of pretexting. Explain that only you, or someone you 
				authorize, should provide personal information to others.
 
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				Keep items with personal 
				information in a safe place. Tear or shred your charge receipts, 
				copies of credit applications, insurance forms, bank checks and 
				other financial statements that you’re discarding, expired 
				charge cards and credit offers you get in the mail.
 
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				Add passwords to your credit card, 
				bank and phone accounts. Avoid using easily available 
				information like your mother’s maiden name, your birth date, the 
				last four digits of your SSN or your phone number, or a series 
				of consecutive numbers.
 
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				Be mindful about where you leave 
				personal information in your home, especially if you have 
				roommates or are having work done in your home by others.
 
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				Find out who has access to your 
				personal information at work and verify that the records are 
				kept in a secure location.
 
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				Order a copy of your credit report 
				from the three nationwide consumer reporting companies every 
				year. An amendment to the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act 
				requires each of the major nationwide consumer reporting 
				companies to provide you with a free copy of your credit 
				reports, at your request, once every 12 months. To order your 
				free annual report from one or all of the nationwide consumer 
				reporting companies, visit 
				
				www.annualcreditreport.com, 
				call toll-free 1-877-322-8228, or complete the Annual Credit 
				Report Request Form and mail it to: Annual Credit Report Request 
				Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281. You can print 
				the order form from 
				ftc.gov/credit. Do not 
				contact the three nationwide consumer reporting companies 
				individually. They provide free annual credit reports only 
				through 
				
				www.annualcreditreport.com, 
				1-877-322-8228, and Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O. 
				Box 105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281. 
 
			
			
			Your credit report contains 
			information on where you work and live, the credit accounts that 
			have been opened in your name, how you pay your bills and whether 
			you’ve been sued, arrested or have filed for bankruptcy. Checking 
			your report annually can help you catch mistakes and fraud before 
			they wreak havoc on your personal finances.
			
			If You Think 
			You’re a Victim
			If you think you’ve been a victim of pretexting, the FTC recommends 
			that you:
			
			
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				Report it to your financial 
				institution immediately. Close accounts that have been tampered 
				with and open new ones with new Personal Identification Numbers 
				(PINs) and passwords. 
				
 
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				Contact the fraud departments at 
				one of the three major credit reporting companies immediately. 
				Tell them to flag your file with a fraud alert including a 
				statement that creditors should get your permission before 
				opening any new accounts in your name. The company you contact 
				will transmit your request to the other two.
					
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						Equifax: call: 
						1-800-525-6285 and write: P.O. Box 740241, Atlanta, GA 
						30374-0241 
						
 
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						Experian: call: 
						1-888-EXPERIAN (1-888-397-3742) and write: P.O. Box 949, 
						Allen, TX 75013-0949 
						
 
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						Trans Union: call: 
						1-800-680-7289 and write: Fraud Victim Assistance 
						Division, P.O. Box 6790, Fullerton, CA 92634 
						 
					
				
				 
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				Contact your local police as soon 
				as possible, and ask to file a report. Even if the police can’t 
				catch the pretexter, having a police report can help you in 
				clearing up your credit records later on.
 
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				Contact the Federal Trade 
				Commission as soon as possible. The FTC works for the consumer 
				to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices 
				in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers 
				spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint, or to get free 
				information on any of 150 consumer topics, call toll-free, 
				1-877-ID-THEFT (1-877-438-4338), or use the complaint form at
				
				
				www.ftc.gov/idtheft. 
				The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft and other 
				fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, 
				online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law 
				enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. 
				 
			
			
			If you’ve been a victim of identity 
			theft, file a complaint with the FTC by contacting the FTC’s 
			Identity Theft Hotline by telephone: toll-free 1-877-ID-THEFT 
			(1-877-438-4338); TDD: 202-326-2502; by mail: Identity Theft 
			Clearinghouse, Federal Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, 
			NW, Washington, DC 20580; or online: 
			
			www.consumer.gov/idtheft.
			
			The FTC has published a free booklet, 
			Take Charge: Fighting Back Against Identity Theft. This 
			comprehensive guide includes information on what consumers can do to 
			reduce their risk of ID theft; how consumers can protect their 
			personal information; the steps consumers can take if they do become 
			victims of ID theft; and a directory of government resources 
			available to ID theft victims. For your copy, visit 
			www.consumer.gov/idtheft.