Globally, cybercrime costs hundreds of billions of dollars each year and it comes in many forms, from .
At the forefront of the fight is the U.S. Secret Service.
While law enforcement is trying to stay on top of it, people are urged to do their part because in the end it’s the consumers who will foot the bill.
A listing of was found last month when authorities searched two homes on Quiet Way in Louisville.
“I’ll be pretty conclusive — it probably came from a recent data breech,” said Paul Johnson with the U.S. Secret Service. “In this case we hit the mother lode.”
According to Johnson, who heads up the Louisville Secret Service Office, the paperwork, an encoder, and a laptop — everything needed to wreak havoc on someone’s credit — were in a child’s backpack.
“Stolen credit card numbers get re-encoded on a re-encoding device. You go to a legitimate store and you want to start buying as many of these as you can,” Johnson said.
Johnson said thieves load gift cards, then sell them at pawn shops for 50 cents on the dollar.
In the case on Quiet Way, three men and a woman, described by authorities as Cuban and Mexican nationals were arrested. All pleaded not guilty
The Secret Service said it was just one of many identity theft scams.
For example, in March, Darnell Brown and Tierra Be’ans each received 42 months in federal prison for fraud and ID theft.
Phony Georgia driver’s licenses were seized.
Police said surveillance video caught the couple buying merchandise at retailers using credit cards obtained by using phony IDs. The total loss to retailers in that case was more than $17,000.
“Criminals want your identity. Protect it with everything you have,” Johnson said.
Sometimes victims can’t see it coming.
It was recently discovered thieves installed skimmers at a New York City subway station to steal card numbers as tickets were being purchased. A tiny camera captured people typing in personal identification numbers.
Johnson said everyone has to stay vigilant.
“The public should be checking their credit rating. They should go to one of the three credit reporting companies and is anyone taking out credit in their name that they are aware of,” Johnson said.
Johnson said if you see a person in a self-service checkout line of a store loading up gift cards, report it to a clerk or police.
Clerks should also check to see if the numbers on the receipt match the last four numbers on the credit card.
Beware of phishing scams, either by the phone or in emails.
“It’s important for individuals to take responsibility for himself. Your identity is something people want. Your credit card number is something people want. You have to protect yourself. Police cannot do that for you,” Johnson said.
IMAGES: PROTECTING YOUR IDENTITY
- As identity thieves develop new ways to invade personal lives, potential victims have to learn to recognize signs of threats and know how to remedy a stolen identity situation.
- Get your credit score checked regularly. Experts suggest checking it quarterly
- Be careful with whom you share your personal information
- Stolen IDs and leaked driver’s license numbers are leading to the creation of fraudulent credit accounts at retails stores.
- Be aware of your surroundings.
- Skimmers are being installed at more than just gas pumps these days.
- Tiny cameras have been used to capture people typing in pin numbers.
- Stay vigilant. It’s not just phone and phishing scams anymore.
- Leaked credit card information could lead to your account info being transposed onto shell credit cards.
- If your identity is stolen, there are damage control steps you can take to get your life back in order.
- Learn more about specific frauds and get the latest alerts from the FBI and Better Business Bureau to keep yourself informed.
- There are different types of identity theft. Learn more about each kind from the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force