US contradicts itself over its own ID theft advice
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press
July 2, 2008
Page 2 of 3
"The government doesn't know what it's doing," he said. "I don't think they do anything right these days."
Military forces, their dependents and retirees must carry their ID cards for a range of services and benefits. Army officials at Fort Bragg, N.C., mistakenly issued to an identity thief a military ID card in July 2001 in the name of retired Army Capt. John Harrison with Harrison's Social Security number.
The thief, Jerry Wayne Phillips, was later convicted and sentenced to 41 months in prison after running up more than $260,000 in charges, including two trucks and a $25,000 Harley Davidson motorcycle. Harrison has testified to Congress about the need for tougher identity theft laws.
Combined with other personal information â€" such as a victim's full name, birth date and home address â€" a Social Security number can be used to open fraudulent credit accounts using a victim's identity. With just a Social Security number, a clever thief can fraudulently obtain a victim's credit report for as little as $50, an important step toward ultimately impersonating a victim.
"The underground is using different pieces of information to put together a picture of you, and a key piece of the puzzle is your Social Security number," said Dan Clements, president of CardCops, which sells services that monitor consumer accounts for identity theft.
Medicare has no plans to change or revise its insurance cards.
The Pentagon will begin eliminating the Social Security number in stages starting at the end of this year.
The IRS said in a statement it would not return a check that was missing the Social Security number, but it has no plans to change its instructions.
"At the surface level, they're working at cross-purposes. There's a reason for that," said Joel Winston, the Federal Trade Commission's director of the division of privacy and identity protection. "They've historically used this as an identifier because it works very well. But there's a widespread recognition that it's not a good idea anymore."
The Defense Department said it doesn't have the money, people, equipment and work stations to replace the cards all at once.
By 2014, the number will not be printed on any of the Defense Department cards except those for retirees who fail to request new IDs. There is no expiration for retiree ID cards â€" used for access to base facilities and services such as the library, gym, bowling alley and golf course.
The Veterans Affairs Department, state governments, private companies and educational institutions already have acted to eliminate visible Social Security numbers:
â€"Private insurers covering roughly 200 million people issued new cards in recent years that replaced Social Security numbers with different identifiers. "I don't know of private insurers who use a Social Security number on the card," said Susan Pisano, spokeswoman for America's Health Insurance Plans. "Industry practice is, where Social Security numbers are used at all, they are used internally." Byron Hollis, national anti-fraud director for the BlueCross BlueShield Association, said the 39 independent companies in the trade group spent about four years replacing insurance cards for more than 90 million customers by the start of 2006.
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