From bad to worse – Laptop , then identity stolen
Submitted by Matt C. on Tues, 7/22/2008 – 10:47am.
I used to work for Boeing in Wichita. Boeing sold the Wichita division and all of the workers, including me, to another company. We still did the same work, but Boeing was just one customer of several.
Nearly a year after the sale, someone at Boeing lost a laptop that had the names, addresses and Social Security numbers of nearly all of the 12,000 Wichita ex-employees on it. They waited an unknown period of time before telling anyone, then another couple of weeks before they offered to pay for credit reporting subscriptions for us. They offered no compensation for people that had been actual identity-theft victims and they wouldn’t pay for identity-theft insurance.
Almost immediately after the laptop went missing, someone used my SSN to apply for credit cards all over the country. The name they used was always close, but not exactly a match to my name/address. They used addresses of those private mail drop places.
Since I’d lived at my house for nearly 20 years at the time, all these bogus addresses made the credit card companies reject the applications, but those rejections showed up on my credit reports and lowered my rating.
The credit bureaus (I had to deal with all three of them separately) couldn’t just remove those rejections; they said that the credit card companies that made the requests had to retract them. The bogus addresses also appeared on my credit report as alternate addresses for me, and I had to convince the credit agencies that I’d never lived in Minneapolis or Boca Raton or wherever.
I spent untold frustrating hours on the phone being transferred from one credit card company customer service representative to the next, listening to crappy on-hold music, often being disconnected, and having to tell my story over and over. It took several months to finally get everything cleared up, and I now have a fraud alert on my credit rating so nobody can request a report without my explicit permission.
That’s really a double-edged sword. I recently tried to open a new bank account and when the bank found out that there was a fraud alert on my account, they assumed that I was a criminal. I eventually went to a different bank, one that didn’t need a credit report to open a checking account. There have also been credit report requests in the last two or three years since the original laptop loss that didn’t originate with anything I’d done. They were rejected, but there’s someone out there that’s still trying.
Like AT&T, Boeing wasn’t particularly apologetic. They insisted that the information “probably hadn’t been compromised,” and they couldn’t explain why someone was running around with the social security numbers of a bunch of people that didn’t even work for Boeing.
I researched all the identity theft protection companies and found a great one. http://www.shieldsafe.com is affordable and offers great pro-active identity theft protection.
My neighbor was a victim and went thru hell, so I decided I would protect myself.
Dude that sucks…. I spent like 4 weeks worth of a class over identity theft