Ridgewood Nj, Ridgewood Police report a series of identity fraud and scams in the Village of Ridgewood.
On March 25 at about 11:45am, a Ridgewood resident reported that they had been involved in a possible scam. The resident had located a vehicle for sale through Wallapop and the seller had requested the resident purchase a Vanilla Gift Card to exchange funds for the vehicle. The resident got suspicious and did not follow through with the purchase.
On March 26, a Ridgewood resident reported that both his and his son’s social security numbers were used to file fraudulent tax returns. On March 28, another resident reported the same issue.
On March 26, a Ridgewood resident reported that someone had made unauthorized purchases from a department store using the victim’s credit card information.
According to the USA.GOV there are several ways to prevent Identity theft.
Take steps to protect yourself from identity theft:
Secure your social security number. Don’t carry your social security card in your wallet or write your number on your checks. Only give out your social security number (SSN) when absolutely necessary.
Don’t respond to unsolicited requests for personal information (your name, birthdate, social security number, or bank account number) by phone, mail, or online.
Watch out for “shoulder surfers.” Shield the keypad when typing your passwords on computers and at ATMs.
Collect mail promptly. Ask the post office to put your mail on hold when you are away from home.
Pay attention to your billing cycles. If bills or financial statements are late, contact the sender.
Review your receipts. Ask for carbon copies and incorrect charge slips as well. Promptly compare receipts with account statements. Watch for unauthorized transactions.
Shred receipts, credit offers, account statements, and expired cards, to prevent “dumpster divers” from getting your personal information.
Store personal information in a safe place at home and at work.
Install firewalls and virus-detection software on your home computer.
Create complex passwords that identity thieves cannot guess easily. Change your passwords if a company that you do business with has a breach of its databases.
Order your credit report once a year and review to be certain that it doesn’t include accounts that you have not opened. Check it more frequently if you suspect someone has gained access to your account information.
2nd day in a row got a robo call from a fake police organization looking for money
Modern life is too exhausting.