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  • Recovering From Identity Theft? 4 steps To take if A victim of identity theft?
    In the course of a busy day, you may write a check at the grocery store, charge
    tickets to a ball game, rent a car, mail your tax returns, change service providers
    for your cell phone, or apply for a credit card. Chances are you don’t give these
    everyday transactions a second thought. But an identity thief does.
    Identity theft is a serious crime. People whose identities have been stolen
    can spend months or years – and thousands of dollars – cleaning up the mess
    the thieves have made of a good name and credit record. In the meantime,
    victims of identity theft may lose job opportunities, be refused loans for
    education, housing, or cars, and even get arrested for crimes they didn’t
    commit. Humiliation, anger, and frustration are among the feelings victims
    experience as they navigate the process of rescuing their identity.

    How identity thieves get your personal information:
    • They get information from businesses or other institutions by:
    4 stealing records or information while they’re on the job
    4 bribing an employee who has access to these records
    4 hacking these records
    4 conning information out of employees
    • They may steal your mail, including bank and credit card statements,
    credit card offers, new checks, and tax information.
    • They may rummage through your trash, the trash of businesses, or public
    trash dumps in a practice known as “dumpster diving.”

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