Identity thieves getting more clever - 0 views
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Karl Wabst on 29 May 09Identity thieves are getting more clever and are increasingly using stolen information to get driver's licenses, employment and government assistance, according to a new report. The survey by the Identity Theft Resource Center also found that the greater awareness of this problem by the public has led to more people discovering they are victims themselves, through monitoring of their bank accounts and credit card statements. Typically, victims learned of their identity theft when they were denied a job or credit or were informed by law enforcement. "Most of our information is beyond our control," said Linda Foley, co-founder of the Identity Theft Resource Center, which surveys victims each year to see how identity theft is changing. "If a thief wants to get it, he will find a way to get it." The report covers the experiences of around 100 of the 1,500 people who were victimized in 2008 and contacted the center, a nonprofit that helps people recover from identity theft. Stolen personal information is now cheap - identities may sell on the black market for as little as 60 cents each - and thieves churn through them quickly to lower their chances of getting caught, Foley said. Rather than opening 10 or 20 credit card accounts in a victim's name, they now open two or three, charge as much as they can and move on to the next person. This raises the cost of identity theft to businesses, whose average loss to fraud nearly doubled last year to $90,107, up from $48,941 the year before.