Identity theft is a crime. Identity theft is a term used to refer to all types of crime in which someone illegally obtains and uses another person’s data in a way that involves lies or deception, mostly for economic gain.

Identity theft is one of the fastest-growing crimes in the country and what can be frustrating about this is that you cannot know how fast it is growing. Not only are identity theft cases hard to solve, but they are also hard to detect. There are identity crimes that are not solved until after a decade because of the lack of information. Remember that though these crimes may be easily detected through credit card purchases, some con artists do not use that avenue. What they do is just assume your name and personal history and use it as their own.
Unlike fingerprints that are impossible to copy, your data, especially your Social Security number, your bank account or credit card number, your telephone number, and other identifiable data can be used, if they fall into the wrong hands.

In the United States and Canada, for example, many people have reported that unauthorized persons have taken funds out of their bank or financial accounts and in the worst cases, took over their identities, obtaining huge debts and committing crimes while using the victims’ names. In these cases, the victim’s losses may include not only financial losses but additional financial costs associated with trying to restore his reputation.

In recent years, the Internet has become the perfect place for criminals to obtain personal data, such as passwords or even banking information. In their haste to explore the exciting features of the Internet, many people respond to “spam” unsolicited E-mail that promises them some benefit but request identifying data, without realizing that in many cases, the requester has no intention of keeping his promise. In some cases, criminals reportedly have used computer technology to obtain large amounts of personal data.

If you have received mail-in applications for “preapproved” credit cards, but have thrown them in the garbage can without tearing up the enclosed materials, criminals may retrieve them from the trash and activate them without your knowledge. (Some credit card companies, when sending credit cards, have adopted security measures that allow a card recipient to activate the card only from his or her home telephone number, but this is not yet a universal practice. Also, if your mail is delivered to a place where others have ready access to it, criminals can intercept and redirect your mail to another location so that they will receive them.

With enough identifying information, a criminal can assume an individual’s identity and conduct a wide range of crimes: for example, applications for loans and credit cards, withdrawals from bank accounts, use of telephone calling cards, or obtaining other goods or privileges which the criminal might be denied if he were to use his real name.

If the criminal takes steps to ensure that bills for the falsely obtained credit cards, or bank statements showing the unauthorized withdrawals are sent to an address other than the victim’s, the victim may not even be aware of what is happening until it is too late when the criminal has done much damage to the victim’s assets, credit, and reputation.