Friday, October 31, 2008

State Department Announces 400 at Risk of Identity Theft

The State Department announced that it has notified nearly 400 passport applicants of a security breach that may have put them at risk of identity theft. Most of the applicants at risk are in the Washington, D.C. area, and their passport applications may have been illegally accessed and used to open fraudulent credit card accounts. The applications contained identifying information, including Social Security numbers. More potential identity theft victims may be notified as the investigation continues.

Most of the people contacted have not become identity theft victims at this point, but they have all been offered free credit monitoring for a year. The breach was discovered when a man was arrested with 19 credit cards in different names and eight completed passport applications. While the State Department declines to comment on how he obtained these applications, it was confirmed that one State Department employee has been fired as a result of this breach.

The department has since stepped up its security for passport records management. While specifics about the method of this security breach have not been disclosed, it is no less disturbing. We don't know how many people were involved, but it's definitely possible that many of these people may already be victims of identity theft and not even know it.

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