7 Steps for Surviving Identity
Theft
I am not an attorney and this is not
legal advice. I am a victim and a survivor of identify
theft.
How did I survive?
I created a system
and prepared for a fight. My system which included
perseverance, patience, and organization made it possible
to battle the businesses, the collectors and the courts.
I won every battle I chose to fight and I did not pay one
bill that was created by the identity
thieves.
Here are 7 strategies I used in my battles.
1. Realize YOU are alone.
Be prepared to
fight this war alone and choose your battles wisely. The
police will be of little help and the government agencies
will even do less.
2. Close your bank account.
Contact an account
manager immediately, inform the manager what
has happened and close your account. Next, tell the
manager that you would like a notarized statement
confirming that the check was a forgery and a notarized
statement that confirms your true signature. If all goes
well, open a new account immediately to handle your new
transactions. If the bank is uncooperative seriously
consider changing banks.
3. Get a police
report.
Contact your local law
enforcement and request a case number. If you have to,
demand one. Don’t let them brush you off, it will cost
you later. Make sure you have copies of the check or
checks and the affidavits from the bank. The next morning
go to the police department or court house to obtain a
copy of the crime report. It will cost about five dollars
but it will well worth it.
4. Contact the credit bureaus.
As soon as you have
obtained your case number and the officer has left, call
the major credit bureaus and request a credit report
watch. This will be a bit inconvenient but well worth it.
In most cases if you call one of the bureaus you can file
with the other two at the same time. The watch will be in
affect for about six months and should be sufficient for
most situations.
5. Organize your materials.
The major key to
winning the war is to stay organized. You must make
multiple copies of all your evidence and keep your
originals in a separate file to insure that you don’t
mail the originals. Then set up files for every company
or bill collector that contacts you and make copies of
everything that receive or send. The paper trail is your
friend.
6. Don’t trust bill collectors or the company.
Don’t trust any bill
collector or company to do things for you. They are
not your friend. They want the money and don’t care
from whom it comes. Also watch out for a company and a
bill collector to try collecting the same bill. Even
after you have sent one of them all your information.
This is a ploy to confuse you and get the
money.
WARNING:
DO NOT
PAY any
bill that is not yours. Once you pay a collector, the
others will pounce on you. You have given in and have
lost your leverage.
7. Be patient.
The whole process requires patience.
Don’t panic and stand your ground with the bill collectors. If
you didn’t make the charges don’t let them scare you into
paying. They will use every trick in the book. They will even
accuse you of filing a false report to get out of paying your
bills. You don’t have to tolerate that kind of treatment hang
up on them and make them contact you again and demand to speak
to someone else.
Remember you are in this alone, you must keep
excellent records and never pay anyone you don’t truly owe.
Remain diligent, calm, and consistent you will win the
war.
To
learn more order your very own copy of
Identity Theft
Survival Guide

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