Best Practices - Children

By Ed Haag, Certified Identity Theft Risk Management Specialist

For purposes of the document, we are using the age group of infant through 19 years of age. As always these practices do apply to other groups. We have targeted this group as it is the largest group being targeted by identity thieves. The reason being that they are easy targets because the crime can go undetected for years and they have clean history in terms of credit and employment. According to a news brief on NBC Chicago's today show on May 3, 2012, children are the fastest growing group targeted and kids under 5 years of age are the fastest growing age group within the category. The FTC has confirmed this group is in danger. Approximately 8% of all I D Theft involves this age group according to the FTC. We believe this to be conservative because very few parents monitor their children's identity during the early years.
Keep your children's personal information , including birth certificate, social security cards, and/or bank accounts locked in a secure place.

Never carry your children's social security cards in your wallet.

Request a free copy of your credit report for each child once a year. Use www.annualcreditreport.com The report should show no credit reported.

Don't give your children their social security information until they are old enough to understand how to safeguard it.

Refuse to give out your children's birth certificates or social security numbers unless absolutely necessary. Ask what safeguards are in place to protect this information.

Check with the social security administration once a year to see if your child's number has been used to report income or obtain employment.

Check with your respective state department of motor vehicles once per year to see if your child's name has been used to obtain a drivers license.

Pay attention if your child begins to receive junk mail, especially credit card or insurance offers. It could mean that their personal info has been compromised.

If you are signing them up for a legitimate offer (IE: magazine subscription, etc.), do it under your name.

Educate your children about the safe use of the internet and social media sites. Teach them to keep personal information private when on line. This includes cell phone use. Social media sites are havens for identity thieves scanning these sites.

Make sure your children are enrolled in an Identity Theft protection service that includes full restitution by licensed investigators.

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