CAA Manitoba Spring 2016 | Page 52

How CAA can help The Right Stuff A selection of unique products, such as RFID (radio frequency identification) blocking wallets and passport holders to prevent fraudulent data scanning, are available at CAA Manitoba service centres and online. shop.caamanitoba.com CAA Identity Protection “There are individuals who prey on unsuspecting people, looking to use their information for their own benefit,” says Larry Simons, assistant vice president for Equifax. This product, powered by Equifax, is free to CAA Plus and Premier members. It includes internet monitoring for your personal information, as well as help cancelling and replacing identification if your wallet is stolen. caamanitoba.com/equifax Equifax Complete™ Advantage Plan To help protect your identity, this product offers quarterly access to your Equifax credit report and daily Equifax credit-file monitoring, with email alerts to key changes. “Changes to a credit file can be an early warning sign of potential identity theft,” Simons says. CAA members can subscribe to this product for a special rate: caamanitoba.com/equifax EQUIFAX AND THE EQUIFAX MARKS USED HEREIN ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF EQUIFAX CANADA CO. 52 SPRING 2016 CAA MANITOBA another cautionary tale. “We discovered says Edmonton detective Bill Allen, who received the 2015 Law Enforcement Award that the dealership kept customer [credit check] documents locked up,” he says, of Excellence for Counterfeit Deterrence “but an employee stole some of them and from the Bank of Canada. sold them to an identity thief.” The question is: How do you protect Although the dealership employee yourself from being defrauded in the was never apprehended, the business first place? changed the way it stores client inforDetective Allen emphasizes that crimimation. The employee’s accomplice, who nals who commit identity fraud prize the committed the fraud, is currently serving a holy trinity of ID: birth certificate, SIN four-year jail sentence for that offence and and driver’s licence. “Even Service Canada, other crimes. which issues SIN cards, advises against There’s another way car shopping can carrying it on you,” he says. “Memorize the open the door to identity theft. It’s comnumber instead because the card has few, mon for dealerships to photocopy your if any, security features, and it can be used driver’s licence before you take a test drive. as secondary ID for a bank account.” That copy contains a wealth of personal If a criminal comes into possession of details. After your test drive, insist that the your wallet, he or she is not just going to copy be destroyed or returned to you. go on a spending spree. “The bad guy can In fact, you should make a habit of then determine where you bank, go to a asking why your information is needed different branch and claim to have lost his any time it’s requested—no debit card,” Allen explains. matter where you are. Then “The bank will ask for ID, so he hands over a [fake] Criminals who ask how it’ll be stored, for driver’s licence and your commit identity exactly how long, and when and how it will be destroyed. SIN card. Since everything fraud prize matches what they have on the holy trinity THE PHONE RINGS. A grandfile, the bank employee issues of ID: birth a new debit card, asking mother answers and it certificate, the fraudster to input a new sounds like her grandson, SIN and PIN.” The criminal has now but he’s frantic—he’s in driver’s licence. trouble and needs bail taken over your identity. In many cases, it doesn’t money, begging her not to stop there. The fraudster can “tell mom and dad.” She then go to other financial institutions to hangs up, drives to the bank and withopen new bank accounts, credit cards and draws the money he needs. But something even lines of credit. The next step is for the gives her pause. She dials her grandson on criminal to get the bank to think that he his cell phone—he’s safe at home and defior she is a good customer by making some nitely did not ask for money. deposits. “They deposit empty envelopes The telephone is an important part of or fake cheques, and then withdraw as the identity thief ’s toolkit. Fortunately, much cash as possible,” Allen says. “When the woman had second thoughts and the bank looks up the account, it falls back discovered the reality of the situation. onto the person who lost their wallet.” “But she was so embarrassed,” Allen says, Of course, rather than stealing directly “she sent her husband to the bank to put from you, thieves can also target busithe money back.” The emergency scam nesses to which you’ve volunteered perdescribed above may seem far-fetched, but sonal details. it does happen. A similar scam is intended to catch its victim off guard: The caller will claim A MAN IS SHOPPING for a new vehicle at a to be from the Canada Revenue Agency car dealership. After test-driving his ride of (CRA), and demand the immediate paychoice, he negotiates the price and offers up ment of outstanding taxes. “This one plays credit check information for leasing and on fear because we’re taught to never, ever purchase purposes—assuming that sensiowe the government,” the detective says. tive information is securely stored. Months “What people need to remember is that later, he discovers he’s on the hook for three the CRA doesn’t give discounts if you pay separate credit card bills in his name— early, and you never have to send the cash none of which he applied for. to a person.” Allen points to this real case as yet