Social Security questions answered
QUESTION:
What can I do to protect myself against identity theft?
ANSWER:
First, don’t carry your Social Security card in your wallet. Keep it at home with your other important papers. Second, avoid giving out your Social Security number. While many banks, schools, doctors, landlords and others will request your number, it is your decision whether to provide it. Ask if there is some other way to identify you in their records.
To report identity theft, fraud or misuse of your Social Security number, the Federal Trade Commission, the nation’s consumer protection agency, recommends that you place a fraud alert on your credit file by contacting one of the following companies (the company you contact is required to contact the other two, which will then place alerts on your reports):
• Equifax, 1-800-525-6285
• Trans Union, 1-800-680-7289
• Experian 1-888-397-3742
Review your credit report for inquires from companies you have not contacted, accounts you did not open and debts on your accounts you cannot explain.
Close any accounts you know, or believe, have been tampered with or opened fraudulently.
File a report with your local police in the community where the identity theft took place.
File a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-438-4338 (TTY 1-866-653-4261).