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Has Your Child's ID Been Stolen?

Posted By : of Data Doctors on March 14, 2019

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I’ve heard the horror stories of a child’s identity being stolen, so what should I be doing to protect my children’s identities?

This question was answered on March 14, 2019. Much of the information contained herein may have changed since posting.


Has Your Child's ID Been Stolen?

It’s easy to think that ID theft is only a problem for adults, but statistics from last year reveal that it’s twice as likely that a child’s ID is stolen over an adult’s.

Identity thieves prefer to steal a child’s ID because they know that it’s more likely to go undiscovered for years until the child is old enough to start applying for credit.

Proof of this can be found on the Dark Web marketplaces that are selling stolen information that can be used for ID theft.

An adult’s stolen W2 can be purchased for as little as $35, while an infant’s ‘fullz’, which includes the baby’s name, SSN, date of birth, and even mother’s maiden name can fetch over $300 according to Terbium Labs (http://bit.ly/2O4Jyxd).

A Blank Canvas
With an infant’s stolen ID, thieves have free reign to use it for a large variety of nefarious activities that range from applying for credit to obtaining government benefits and healthcare to filing fraudulent tax returns.

In some cases, your child’s social security number could be used to create a hybrid ID, which means that they are essentially inventing a person that doesn’t actually exist.

If you find yourself in that type of mess, it can become even more complicated to untangle the fraud and regain control of your child’s identity.

How Your Child’s Info is Compromised
From the moment your child has been assigned a social security number, it can become vulnerable to theft as it’s being used in the normal course of life.

The most likely area of exposure will come from the medical world, as this is most likely the first place you’ll be asked to use their social security number.

Of the over 2500 reported data breaches over the past 3 years, more than half of them (1338) were from companies related to the medical field that included providers and insurance carriers (http://bit.ly/2Fgi6tu). 

Protection Steps
Keeping tight control over any printed document with your child’s sensitive information is an obvious first step along with making sure to shred anything you plan to discard.

When you are asked to provide your child’s SSN by anyone, make sure it’s actually a requirement.

Pay attention to your physical mail, especially junk mail – if your child’s name is listed as the recipient, it can be an early indication that someone is making use of your child’s identity.

Check with the three credit bureaus (TransUnion http://bit.ly/2FfvvSo - Experian http://bit.ly/2FgfyvA - Equifax http://bit.ly/2Fezq2b) to see if a credit file already exists for your child.

In some cases, you can put a freeze on your child’s credit file, but make sure you keep the PIN that gets assigned to unfreeze the file in a really safe place that will get passed to your child in the event something happens to you.

About the author

of Data Doctors on March 14, 2019

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