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Identity
Theft
Suing
Credit Bureaus to Undo ID Theft

Carol
Mixon didn't know the criminal that targeted her. She is not sure
how
or why she was targed as the next victim.
Years
later, Mixon is still cleaning the mess from being a victim of an identity
theft and denied justice by every government agency with the power
and
authority to provide justice or help undo the damaged credit history
from the theif.

Fighting
Credit Bureaus
Wyatt
Andrews
CBS News
Oct. 5, 1999
SHREVEPORT,
Louisiana — It happens every 79 seconds in this country. A thief
steals someone's identity, opens accounts in the victim's name and
goes
on a buying spree.
Four
years ago someone stole Carol Mixon's identity and ruined her credit.
She is a court reporter, working in Shreveport, LA. The imposters were
500 miles away in Houston shopping on credit cards in her name. That was
four years ago. Her credit is still in shambles. When she applied for
a mortgage the answer was: Forget it.
"This
is the bank where I banked for 20 years," Mixon said. "They
told me, oh, the numbers just don't add up," she says, adding she
really thinks it was her credit report.
Before
the fraud, Carol and her husband Billy had a perfect credit history. The
Mixons did what fraud victims are supposed to do. After two painstaking
years writing all the right letters their credit was finally cleared -
or so it seemed.
Just
last spring as they prepared to build a new home, yet another mortgage
fell through. Of the three leading agencies that track consumer credit,
only Trans Union gave them a clean report. The other two, Equifax and
Experian re-reported the old, fraudulent debt.
What
Carol Mixon found was that even when you prove to the credit bureaus that
someone stole your identity and rang up bad debt, there is no real delete
button on the credit bureau computers. That bad information is still stored
in your name.
None
of the credit bureaus would comment on the Mixon case, because the Mixons
are suing Equifax and Experian. But Trans Union agreed to demonstrate
how their fraud investigations work.
In
most cases, manager Diane Terry says if the consumer can document fraud,
Trans Union will block the bogus charges from reappearing on a credit
report.
"We
do have a suppression function, and when we do confirm fraud, we do suppress
that information," she says.
Experian
and Equifax told CBS News the same, but Trans Union says that in some
cases, fraud charges can resurface.
"It
can happen although it's the exception," Terry says.
"They
just don't give a damn," says Dave Szwak, who is Carol Mixon's lawyer.
The credit bureaus could solve this problem but don't because correcting
information costs too much money, he says.
When
the credit bureaus say, "We're on this; we're all over it,"
Szwak says, "That's a joke."
"They
don't make any money by saying good things about you. It's a negative
information system. They score the negative," Szwak says.
What
still makes the Mixons laugh is that every week they get offers for more
credit cards addressed to the imposters.
So
for the people who ran up the bad credit, credit is available while the
Mixons' credit is no good.
"It
makes you wonder how someone could be - what's the word besides stupid," says
Billy Mixon
Their
nightmare continues. Despite the fact the Mixons are suing the credit
bureaus, their latest report from Experian still lists two fraudulent
charges and warns creditors that the Mixons are a credit risk.
Experts
say you can take these steps to help protect yourself from identity thieves:
Don't carry your checkbook, extra credit cards or your Social Security
number in your wallet or purse.
Put ATM and credit card receipts in a safe place or destroy them.
Shred preapproved credit card offers and all financial documents before
discarding.
Don't write your credit card number on your checks.
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