Consumers need to be careful with bank statements and literature
October 22, 2010 by Reno
Filed under News, News-Banking
Industry officials have warned that given the increase in identity theft and fraud over the years consumers need to start being far more careful with their bank statements and other literature that may have personal details on such as credit card statements, bills, bank letters, and other sensitive documents.
Many people tend to treat their personal documents, financial letters, and statements like normal waste paper, and simply put them into the waste paper basket when they are done with them or sling them into black bags outside. However, this leaves them open to identity theft because once they are in the rubbish outside they are accessible by anyone.
Experts have said that in order to minimise on becoming victims of identity theft and fraud consumers should ensure that all paperwork such as this is shredded properly so that others cannot access details about the accountholder. The advise has come from the fraud prevention service CIFAS, which has outlined some of the dangers that can lead to consumers becoming victims of identity fraud.
CIFAS said that the effects of fraud can be far-ranging, stating this could be anything “from finding out that a fraudster has set up, or attempted to obtain, accounts, products and services in your name, through to discovering that an existing account has been emptied by criminals”.
The agency said that it was not only paper documentation and bank details that consumers had to be careful with, as many fraudsters and identity thieves were now operating online. Officials said that it had therefore become increasingly important for consumers to be more vigilant and careful when reviewing or using their financial accounts via the internet, as otherwise fraudsters could quickly and easily gain access to important account and personal details.
Tags: identity theft, Crimes, fraud, Bank statement, theft, identity, nameAnother data breach bungle by HMRC
March 1, 2010 by admin
Filed under News, News-Banking
It was revealed recently that HM Revenue & Customs had been involved in another data breach bungle, raising further concerns over identity theft. The latest blunder involved over two thousand letters being sent out to claimants with regards to child benefits, but many of them had the personal details of other people on. Read more
Tags: Taxation in the United Kingdom, identity theft, United Kingdom, Data security, HM Revenue and Customs, Data breach, security, CrimesThirty billion a year attributed to fraud
February 6, 2010 by admin
Filed under News, News-Banking
Fraud is a type of crime that has hit the UK, as well as other major economies, hard over the years, and over the past few years, with the credit crisis and the recession taking their toll, the levels of fraud have become even more disturbing. Read more
Tags: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Deception, Madoff investment scandal, fraud, insurance fraudEconomic downturn results in rise in shoplifting
January 29, 2010 by admin
Filed under News, News Utilities
The economic downturn has apparently led to an increase in shoplifting activity in the UK according to a recent report. Figures have shown that retailers have seen a sharp rise in shoplifting activities over the course of the recession. The figures formed part of the latest crime survey by the British Retail Consortium, which revealed that between 2008 and 2009 shoplifting activities had increased by around one third. Read more
Tags: Crimes, theft, Criminal law, Shoplifting, EthicsMP claims that banks are too laid back about ID theft
April 25, 2007 by admin
Filed under News, News-Banking
A Tory Party MP has claimed that banks in the UK are far too laid back when it comes to the problems of identity theft – a problem that is growing in the UK and has become a major concern in many areas. Read more
Tags: Tory Party MP, id theft, british bankers association, Crimes, identity, identity theft, access, identity fraud

