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ID Theft Confused wth Other Crimes
Keith Londrie II

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Identity theft is often confused with other crimes that lead
to identity theft. As an example, a thief caught stealing credit card numbers
is not necessarily committing identity theft. He is committing a financial
crime. Identity theft happens when a criminal steals your personal information
for the express purpose of pretending to be you.



 



Why would anyone want to be you? If you’re anything like me, even the
thought that someone would want to take over your life might make you smile and
shake your head. Go ahead, I would tell them. It’s all yours. Except I do not
really mean it.



Even if you did, what an identity thief wants from you is not really your
life; it’s just everything that tells others that your life belongs to you.
Your Social Security number is one good example. A person who can’t get a
Social Security number will sometimes steal one that belongs to someone else,
so they can have the benefits of having a Social Security number.



Another reason that identities are stolen is to gain access to your
financial accounts. In fact, this is one of the most common reasons that a
criminal is trying to become you. Your power lies in your good name, and if a
thief can gain control of your good name, then they also control that power.



The power that I mean is purchasing power. The ability to own a home, hold a
job, and apply for credit. These are what identity thieves are after.



 



Identity thieves are not the pasty-faced, Pop-Tart eating nerds that you
might picture them to be. Next time you go out to the grocery store, look
around at the people who are also there. Any one of them could be an identity
thief. Young, old, rich, poor, any nationality—there are no restraints that say
one type of person is more likely to be an identity thief than another.



It doesn’t matter that the doctor you saw last week had the best nurses in
the county. One of those nurses could be an identity thief who steals personal
information from patient records and then sells that information to another
criminal, who then resells it to illegal aliens. Even a single mom of three
that just moved in across the street could be an identity thief.



No group of people is more or less likely to be an identity thief. Criminals
steal identities for profit, and anyone in the right place with access to the
right information might find the lure of extra cash too much to turn down.





Keith Londrie II is the Webmaster of http://www.identity-theft-information.info/  A website that specializes in providing information on <a href="http://www.identity-theft-information.info/">identity theft</a> that you can research on the internet. Please Visit http://www.identity-theft-information.info/ now!



































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It's just a buck. How much trouble can that be? And so you shrug at the odd little charge on your credit or debit card, maybe for an iTunes download you're not sure you remember but, oh well ... That's exactly the reaction scam artists want. It's a green light to start ripping you off big time.






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