New Study by Identity Theft 911 Shows Severe Impact of Identity Theft on New York State Residents (News Release)   - 1,819 Views,

Summary: Wow, identity theft is a hot topic in the news this week! SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., June 21 /PRNewswire/ -- A new study focusing on identity theft in the state of New York reveals just how seriously this crime threatens New York residents. The study, "Analysis ...

Previous Article « The Scary New World of Identity Theft: Grand Theft Identity
Read Next Article » EarthLink Wins Prestigious CNET Editors’ Choice Award for Web Hosting (News Release)

  Follow Anne on Twitter     Friend Anne on Facebook

Wow, identity theft is a hot topic in the news this week!

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., June 21 /PRNewswire/ — A new study focusing on identity theft in the state of New York reveals just how seriously this crime threatens New York residents. The study, “Analysis of Significant Identity Theft & Crime Patterns in the State of New York,” was authored by Identity Theft 911 (http://www.identitytheft911.com).

Among the alarming facts called out in the New York study:

— Identity theft in New York increased by 39% over the past two years
(FTC).
— Nationwide, New York ranked seventh per capita and third in absolute
terms for identity theft in 2004 (FTC).
— An estimated 800,000 New York residents (4.2% of the population) were
victimized in 2004.
— Identity theft cost New York enterprises and victims nearly $6 billion
and more than 42 million hours in victim resolution in 2004.
— One in nine households (11.5%) in the state were victimized in 2004.
— Identity theft losses in the state are 9.3 times higher than aggregate
losses from burglary, larceny theft, and motor vehicle theft.
— The most heavily victimized New York metropolitan areas include
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, Rochester, and Buffalo-Niagra
Falls.

Some businesses, recognizing the severe impact of identity theft on individual consumers, are stepping up to help them deal with this threat. MetLife Auto & Home has responded to the crisis by becoming the first homeowners insurer in the U.S. to include identity theft resolution services on its renters, condominium, and homeowners policies at no additional charge. The new services, which include one-on-one, start-to-finish identity theft victim resolution as well as ongoing proactive education, are provided by Identity Theft 911. MetLife Auto & Home rolled out the policy enhancement to New York policyholders on June 1.

“As a leading personal lines insurer, our goal is to be there when our customers need us most, whether during a natural disaster, fire, auto accident or when they are victimized by identity theft,” said Bill Mullaney, president of MetLife Auto & Home. “Our customers told us that they were concerned about this growing threat, and this coverage will provide them with additional peace of mind.”

In the financial services arena, Nassau Educators Federal Credit Union will be the state’s first financial institution to provide identity theft education and victim resolution at no charge to every one of its 100,000-plus members. The credit union is partnering with Identity Theft 911 to deliver the groundbreaking program.

New York legislators and law enforcement officials have also recognized the serious threat identity theft presents for state residents. “What bank robbery was to the Depression Era, identity theft is to the Information Age,” declared Senator Charles Schumer of New York at a March 2005 Senate Banking Committee hearing on identity theft. Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau has 66 prosecutors assigned to identity theft cases, who handled 1,052 prosecutions in the past six months.

“Identity theft is financial terrorism, and individual consumers can’t fight it alone,” said Identity Theft 911 Chairman Adam Levin, former Director of the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs. “Americans need help from their trusted institutions to deal with this very serious risk.”

Identity Theft 911 CEO Sheryl Christenson lauded MetLife Auto & Home and Nassau Educators Federal Credit Union for providing an identity theft safety net to policyholders, members, and their families at no additional charge. “The truth is that we can’t afford to wait for individual consumers to come to grips with this extremely serious threat,” said Christenson. “As this new study makes clear, this is not a wait-and-see situation. People count on their insurers and financial institutions to weigh these risks and take appropriate action on their behalf. MetLife Auto & Home and Nassau Educators Federal Credit Union are doing the right thing for their people, and they deserve our praise.”

Organizations or journalists wishing to receive a copy of the new study should contact Identity Theft 911 by telephone at 480-355-8500.

New Study by Identity Theft 911 Shows Severe Impact of Identity Theft on New York State Residents (News Release)

 Follow Anne on Twitter

 Twitter Explained in Plain English

 Friend Anne on Facebook

Previous Article « The Scary New World of Identity Theft: Grand Theft Identity
Read Next Article » EarthLink Wins Prestigious CNET Editors’ Choice Award for Web Hosting (News Release)

Read more:

»  Identity Theft Insurance Now Available

»  Identity Theft Protection Available from Banks - For a Price

»  Want Identity Theft Protection? Call CardCops for the Ultimate in Identity Theft Insurance: Identity Theft Prevention!

»  Georgia Federal Credit Union Teams With Identity Theft 911 to Protect Members (News Release)

For additional similar stories check out our archives on Identity Theft

NOTE: We never, ever, ever will recommend any product or service on this site that we have not regularly used ourselves and do not wholeheartedly believe in. That said, in some cases after being very pleased with a product or service, we may enter into a relationship with the provider of that product or service such that if someone purchases that product or service based on our recommendation, we may get a small payment. Such payments go towards the upkeep of the Internet Patrol.

 

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Warning! All comments which contain URLs and are clearly just spam to generate a link back to the URL will be deleted on sight. Don't bother wasting your time!

If you are going to include a URL in your comment,
please keep it under 25 characters in length,
or use TinyURL to shorten it before including it in your comment.

Line and paragraph breaks are automatic, your email address is never displayed.
HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)


If you have not posted a comment here before, we apologize for having to ask you to enter the letters and numbers you see in the image above to validate your comment, but we are being attacked by thousands of comment form spams every day! You only need to do this once; once you have successfuly posted a comment here you will not be asked to do this again. Thank you for your understanding!

 
 This article first appeared on 6/28/2005
The Internet Patrol
Patrolling the Internet for You!