EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was originally published in the January 2008 issue of Kiplinger's Retirement Report. To subscribe, click here.
In 1994, George Handiboe, a nurse's aide, began caring for an elderly man in Steelton, Pa. After the man died four years later, Handiboe, who lived in nearby Harrisburg, Pa., remained close with the widow. He took her to doctor's appointments, to dinner and to run errands. But it turned out he wasn't a friend -- he was quietly assuming her identity.
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Handiboe opened credit-card accounts in the woman's name, according to the Pennsylvania attorney general's office. He also opened joint accounts, posing as the woman's son, law enforcement officials say. The family became suspicious after the woman moved into an assisted-living facility and her real son began receiving calls from creditors and collection agencies.
During a search of Handiboe's home, agents seized a handstamp bearing the woman's signature. Handiboe, then 45, was charged with identity theft and other crimes in this case, and he was charged with similar crimes against a man for whom he had provided home care. In May 2007, he was sentenced to three to six years in state prison, prosecutors say.
Unfortunately, identity-theft crimes directed at seniors are far from rare. "Senior citizens are targeted in frauds and schemes," says Nils Frederiksen, spokesman for the Pennsylvania attorney general's office. "We know that thieves are looking to take advantage of them."
Thieves often go after the elderly because many have more cash reserves than younger people, and the elderly may be more trusting when telemarketers call for information. Some of the oldest seniors may not closely monitor their accounts. And many are not savvy about Internet scams. For instance, thieves assume seniors may respond to e-mails, perhaps purporting to be from the Social Security Administration, seeking personal information.
As with the Handiboe case, home-care aides, as well as retirement-home staff, may have easy access to a senior's records. Some retirees carry their Medicare card, which displays their Social Security number. One of the most important pieces of information to identity thieves is your Social Security number. "It's the holy grail," says Linda Foley, founder of Identity Theft Resource Center, a San Diego–based nonprofit organization.
Consider these examples of identity theft targeted toward seniors:
-- In December, a North Carolina woman was sentenced to 18 years in prison after being convicted of identity theft involving two elderly women living in a retirement community in Illinois. She was accused of stealing a total of $116,000 from the women's bank accounts. The thief obtained their information through repeated calls to the two women, according to the prosecutor. The prosecutor says the con artist pretended to be from various companies, such as AT&T and Walgreens, and from the state and federal governments.
-- In October 2006, four people in Michigan were sentenced to prison terms in connection with identity-theft charges involving a woman who lived in an adult-care facility that they owned in East Lansing. The four admitted to stealing as much as $200,000 from the woman, who had dementia, before she died in February 2005, according to the U.S. attorney's office.
-- A Georgia woman was accused in 2004 of being the mastermind of a multistate identity-theft ring. Prosecutors say the woman first scanned obituaries for names and addresses. Then she bought Social Security numbers and credit histories of the dead persons from Internet companies that do background searches, and she resold the information to people with bad credit. The thieves used the information to buy cars and open bank accounts under the names of the deceased.
Identity thieves obtain personal information through a variety of methods: digging through trash, stealing wallets or purses, taking mail from mailboxes, looking over people's shoulders at ATMs, and sending e-mails or letters pretending to be from the government or a company.
In some cases, thieves steal health-insurance and prescription-drug cards in order to obtain medical services or goods. When a thief uses the information to receive medical services, medical identity theft presents another danger for ID-theft victims. The victims may end up receiving the wrong treatment based on information put into a medical record by a provider who gave care to the ID thief.
POSTED BY: JOYCE (March 05, 2008 09:44 PM)
I have been a victim of identity theft and you are not the same person after it has happened to you. The truth is our lives are run by the events that take place in our lives on a daily bases and the exchange of our personel information has to take place in order to just exist in this information age.Tania, even though you have put yourself on the "opt out" list for credit card solicitations like so many people have done. It does not protect you from the other 4 areas of this monumental problem,Drivers License Identity Theft,Social Security Identity Theft,Character or Criminal Identity Theft and believe it or not Medical Identity Theft.A professional thief can assume your identity in just a few minutes, but it can take years for a person to restore your identity...
POSTED BY: Debbie L. (March 24, 2008 01:04 AM)
Thanks for a great article on IDT! It's very informative and gives some very good tips on how to prevent this terrible crime. I, too, have a membership with Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc. It gives me great peace of mind to know that if anything ever happens to my identity (in five areas, including medical and criminal ID theft, not just financial), they will not just inform me of the problem, they will also restore my identity...
POSTED BY: P.G. (April 23, 2008 02:35 PM)
If your state has a credit freeze law, it will go along way to preventing financial loss due to ID theft. Call you state Attourney General and find out (how to) get one rolling thru the legislature. With this law in place, you can call the credit bureaus and request a 'freeze' on your account...the lender cannot see your credit score (if someone steals your credit card and attempts ID theft). You can temporarily remove the freeze for your purposes only. Indiana has a model to use.



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