I first was notified that someone had used my Social Security number for their taxes in February 2004. I also found out that this person opened a checking account, cable and utility accounts, and a cell phone account in my name. I'm still trying to clear up everything and just received my income tax refund after waiting four to five months. Trying to work and get all this cleared up is very stressful.From a consumer's complaint to the FTC, July 9, 2004
Despite your best efforts to manage the flow of your personal information or to keep it to yourself, skilled identity thieves may use a variety of methods to gain access to your data.
How identity thieves use your personal information:
| Address labels from junk mail and magazines | ATM receipts |
| Bank statements | Birth certificate copies |
| Canceled and voided checks | Credit and charge card bills, carbon copies, summaries and receipts |
| Credit reports and histories | Documents containing maiden name (used by credit card companies for security reasons) |
| Documents containing names, addresses, phone numbers or e-mail addresses | Documents relating to investments |
| Documents containing passwords or PIN numbers | Driver's licenses or items with a driver's license number |
| Employee pay stubs | Employment records |
| Expired passports and visas | Unlaminated identification cards (college IDs, state IDs, employee ID badges, military IDs) |
| Legal documents | Investments, stocks and property transactions |
| Item with a signature (leases, contracts, letters) | Luggage tags |
| Medical and dental records | Papers with a Social Security number |
| Pre-approved credit card applications | Receipts with checking account numbers |
| Report cards | Resumés or curriculum vitae |
| Tax forms | Transcripts |
| Travel itineraries | Used airline tickets |
| Utility bills (telephone, gas, electric, water, cable TV, Internet) | |