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Identity Theft Complaint & Recovery Guide

Quick Summary

Identity theft affected over 1.1 million Americans in 2025, with total losses exceeding $10 billion. When someone steals your personal information to commit fraud, quick action is essential. This guide walks you through reporting to authorities, disputing fraudulent accounts, repairing credit damage, and filing complaints with your Attorney General to hold perpetrators accountable.

Act Fast: The first 24 hours are critical. Place fraud alerts immediately, file police report, and begin documenting everything. Quick action limits damage and makes recovery easier.

Types of Identity Theft

Financial Identity Theft

Most common type (70% of cases)

  • Credit card fraud - Opening cards in your name
  • Bank account takeover or new accounts
  • Loan fraud - Auto, mortgage, personal loans
  • Tax refund theft - Filing return with your SSN
  • Government benefits fraud

2025 loss average: $9,800 per victim

Medical Identity Theft

  • Using your health insurance for treatment
  • Obtaining prescription drugs in your name
  • Filing false insurance claims
  • Medical records contamination

Danger: Incorrect medical records can affect your treatment and be life-threatening

2025 cases: 274,000 reported incidents

Criminal Identity Theft

  • Giving your name when arrested
  • Creating fake IDs with your information
  • Traffic violations in your name
  • Warrants issued under your name

Impact: Can result in arrest warrants, denied employment, inability to get security clearance

Child Identity Theft

  • Using child's SSN (clean credit history)
  • Often goes undetected for years
  • Discovered when child applies for job, license, or college

2025 stat: Over 1.25 million children affected annually

Average damage: $16,500 per child

Synthetic Identity Theft

  • Combines real SSN (often child's) with fake information
  • Creates new identity that doesn't match any real person
  • Hardest to detect and prosecute
  • Builds credit before defaulting

Growing threat: 43% increase in 2025

Account Takeover

  • Hacker gains access to existing accounts
  • Changes passwords, contact info, security questions
  • Drains accounts or makes unauthorized purchases
  • Email, bank, social media, shopping accounts

2025 increase: Account takeovers up 67% from 2024

Immediate Actions (First 24 Hours)

Time is Critical: Each hour of delay allows thieves to do more damage. Follow these steps immediately upon discovering identity theft.

Step 1: Place Fraud Alert (5 minutes)

Call ONE of the three credit bureaus to place fraud alert. They're required to notify the other two.

Effect: Creditors must verify your identity before opening new accounts. Free, lasts 1 year, renewable.

Step 2: Get Free Credit Reports (10 minutes)

You're entitled to free credit reports from all three bureaus when you're identity theft victim.

Request at: AnnualCreditReport.com (only official source)

Review for:

  • Accounts you didn't open
  • Unauthorized credit inquiries
  • Incorrect personal information
  • Fraudulent collection accounts
  • Wrong addresses or employers

Step 3: Report to FTC (15 minutes)

File official report at IdentityTheft.gov

Creates:

  • Official identity theft affidavit
  • Personalized recovery plan
  • Pre-filled letters to send to companies
  • Documentation for police report

You'll need:

  • Personal information (name, address, SSN, DOB)
  • Details of fraudulent activity you've discovered
  • Any documentation you have

Step 4: Change Compromised Passwords (30 minutes)

If accounts were accessed:

  • Change passwords on all financial accounts
  • Change email password first (thieves use email to reset other accounts)
  • Enable two-factor authentication everywhere possible
  • Use unique, strong passwords for each account
  • Consider password manager (1Password, Bitwarden, LastPass)

Step 5: Contact Affected Companies (varies)

Call fraud departments of any companies where fraud occurred:

  • Banks/Credit cards: Close compromised accounts, dispute charges
  • Utilities: Report if account opened in your name
  • Phone companies: If new service in your name
  • Government agencies: If tax, benefits, or unemployment fraud

Ask for:

  • Fraud department transfer
  • Case number for your report
  • Written confirmation they're closing/disputing
  • Copy of fraudulent applications (you have right to these)

How to Report to FTC (IdentityTheft.gov)

Why Report to FTC First

  • Creates official federal record of identity theft
  • Identity Theft Report gives you legal rights under Fair Credit Reporting Act
  • Recovery plan with personalized checklist
  • Pre-filled dispute letters to send to companies
  • Required for some disputes - creditors and bureaus may require FTC report
  • Helps law enforcement - provides data to identify fraud patterns

What You'll Need to Complete Report

  • Personal information (name, address, SSN, date of birth)
  • Details of how you discovered the theft
  • Timeline of when theft likely occurred
  • List of fraudulent accounts/activity you've found
  • Supporting documents (credit reports, collection letters, account statements)
  • Police report number (if you already have one)
  • Any suspects or information about who might be responsible

Step-by-Step Process

  1. Go to IdentityTheft.gov
  2. Click "Get Started" and create account (or report anonymously)
  3. Answer questions about what happened:
    • Type of identity theft
    • When you discovered it
    • What accounts/information were affected
    • Estimated losses
  4. Provide details about fraudulent activity
  5. Upload supporting documents
  6. Submit report
  7. Save your Identity Theft Report - you'll need this for disputes
  8. Follow personalized recovery plan provided

Your Identity Theft Report

After filing with FTC, you can add a police report to create complete "Identity Theft Report."

This report gives you:

  • Extended fraud alert: 7 years (vs. 1 year standard)
  • Free credit reports: Multiple reports per year
  • Debt blocking: Credit bureaus must block fraudulent debts
  • Company compliance: Companies must provide fraud records to you
  • Stop debt collection: Stop collection on fraudulent debts

Filing Police Report

Do You Need Police Report? Not always required, but strongly recommended. Some creditors and credit bureaus require it to dispute fraudulent accounts.

Where to File

File with police in:

  • Where you live (most common)
  • Where theft occurred (if known)
  • Where business is located (if fraudulent account opened)

If police refuse to take report: Some jurisdictions are reluctant if crime didn't occur in their area. Provide FTC Identity Theft Report and explain creditors require police report.

What to Bring

  • Government-issued photo ID
  • Proof of address (utility bill, lease)
  • FTC Identity Theft Report (from IdentityTheft.gov)
  • Credit reports showing fraudulent accounts
  • Collection letters or bills for accounts you didn't open
  • Documentation showing accounts aren't yours
  • Any other evidence of identity theft

What to Tell Police

  • When you discovered identity theft
  • What fraudulent activity occurred (be specific)
  • How you think thief got your information (if known)
  • What steps you've already taken
  • If you know or suspect who did it

Important: Get case/report number and officer's name/badge number. Request copy of police report.

If Police Won't File Report

Some departments refuse identity theft reports, especially if suspect isn't local. Options:

  • Show them FTC guidance requiring police report for victim rights
  • File "miscellaneous incident report" instead (better than nothing)
  • Ask for supervisor
  • Try different jurisdiction where fraud occurred
  • File with state police
  • Document refusal (officer name, date, reason) for creditors

Fraud Alerts vs. Credit Freeze

Fraud Alert

What it does: Requires creditors to verify your identity before opening accounts

Duration:

  • Initial alert: 1 year (renewable)
  • Extended alert: 7 years (requires Identity Theft Report)

Pros:

  • Free
  • Easy to place (one call notifies all three bureaus)
  • Doesn't block legitimate credit applications

Cons:

  • Less secure than freeze
  • Creditors may not always verify identity

Credit Freeze (Security Freeze)

What it does: Blocks all access to your credit report - no new accounts can be opened

Duration: Until you lift it

Pros:

  • Most secure option
  • Free in all states
  • Completely blocks new credit

Cons:

  • Must lift freeze when you apply for credit
  • Must contact all three bureaus separately
  • Need to remember PIN to lift freeze

Recommendation: Use freeze if you won't be applying for credit soon

How to Place Credit Freeze

Must contact all three bureaus:

You'll need: Name, address, SSN, date of birth, proof of address

Save your PINs - you need these to lift freeze temporarily or permanently

Don't Forget These Credit Agencies

Beyond the "big three," also freeze with:

Disputing Fraudulent Accounts

Step 1: Dispute with Credit Bureaus

Send dispute letter to all three bureaus for each fraudulent item.

Include:

  • Copy of FTC Identity Theft Report
  • Copy of police report
  • Letter explaining the account is fraudulent
  • Copy of your ID
  • Proof of address

File online or mail:

  • Equifax: Dispute online or mail to: Equifax Information Services LLC, P.O. Box 740256, Atlanta, GA 30374
  • Experian: Dispute online or mail to: Experian, P.O. Box 4500, Allen, TX 75013
  • TransUnion: Dispute online or mail to: TransUnion LLC, P.O. Box 2000, Chester, PA 19016

Timeline: Bureaus have 30 days to investigate and respond

Step 2: Dispute with Creditors

Also send dispute directly to company that opened fraudulent account.

Sample dispute letter:

[Your Name]
[Your Address]
[Date]

[Company Fraud Department]
[Company Address]

Re: Fraudulent Account - [Account Number]

Dear Fraud Department,

I am writing to report fraudulent activity on account [number]. This account was opened without my knowledge or authorization as a result of identity theft.

I am a victim of identity theft and did not open this account, authorize anyone to open it, or receive any benefit from it. I request that you:

  1. Close this fraudulent account immediately
  2. Absolve me of all charges associated with this account
  3. Provide me with copies of all application and transaction records
  4. Report this account as "closed at consumer's request" to all credit bureaus
  5. Stop all collection activity on this account

Enclosed are copies of:

  • FTC Identity Theft Report
  • Police report
  • Proof of my identity and address

Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, you are required to provide me with copies of documents relating to this fraud. Please send these within 30 days.

Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter.

Sincerely,
[Your Signature]
[Your Name]

Send certified mail, return receipt requested

Step 3: Dispute Collection Accounts

If fraudulent debt went to collections:

  • Send debt validation letter demanding proof debt is yours
  • Include Identity Theft Report and police report
  • Explain you're identity theft victim and debt is fraudulent
  • Demand they stop collection and remove from credit report
  • Report to CFPB if they continue collection

If Company Refuses to Remove Fraudulent Account

  • File complaint with Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  • File complaint with your state Attorney General
  • Send follow-up dispute with more documentation
  • Consider consulting consumer rights attorney
  • Report to FTC for investigation

Filing Complaint with Attorney General

When to File AG Complaint

  • Creditor refuses to close fraudulent account
  • Company won't provide fraud records you're entitled to
  • Debt collector continues collection on fraudulent debt
  • Credit bureau won't remove fraudulent accounts
  • Business doesn't follow identity theft procedures
  • Suspected business involvement in identity theft

What to Include in AG Complaint

  • Your information: Name, address, contact info
  • Company information: Name, address, account number
  • Timeline: When identity theft occurred, when you reported it
  • What you've done: Steps you've taken (FTC report, police report, disputes)
  • Company's response: What company did or didn't do
  • Documentation:
    • FTC Identity Theft Report
    • Police report
    • Copies of all disputes sent to company
    • Company's responses
    • Credit reports showing fraudulent accounts
    • Any other relevant documents
  • What you want: Account closed, debt forgiven, credit report correction

Where to File

Complete Recovery Checklist

Immediate (Day 1-3)

  • Place fraud alert with credit bureaus
  • Order credit reports from all three bureaus
  • File FTC Identity Theft Report at IdentityTheft.gov
  • File police report
  • Change passwords on compromised accounts
  • Enable two-factor authentication
  • Contact banks/creditors about fraudulent accounts

Short-term (Week 1-4)

  • Consider credit freeze
  • Send dispute letters to credit bureaus
  • Send dispute letters to creditors
  • Close or freeze compromised accounts
  • Update automatic payments to new accounts
  • Review credit reports for additional fraud
  • Document all communications
  • Check medical records if medical ID theft
  • Contact IRS if tax fraud (1-800-908-4490)
  • Contact Social Security if SSN misuse (1-800-772-1213)

Ongoing (Months 1-12)

  • Monitor credit reports monthly
  • Follow up on disputes every 30 days
  • Check credit scores regularly
  • Review bank statements carefully
  • Watch for collection letters on fraudulent debts
  • File tax return early to prevent tax refund theft
  • Keep all documentation organized
  • Consider credit monitoring service

Long-term Prevention

  • Maintain credit freeze or fraud alert
  • Use strong, unique passwords with password manager
  • Enable two-factor authentication everywhere
  • Check credit reports at least twice yearly
  • Shred financial documents before discarding
  • Don't carry Social Security card
  • Be cautious with personal information online
  • Use secure WiFi (avoid public WiFi for sensitive transactions)

Identity Theft Prevention Tips

Protect Your SSN

  • Don't carry Social Security card
  • Ask why businesses need SSN (often not required)
  • Only provide SSN when absolutely necessary
  • Never provide SSN via email
  • Shred documents containing SSN

Secure Your Accounts

  • Use strong, unique passwords for each account
  • Enable two-factor authentication
  • Use password manager
  • Review account activity regularly
  • Log out of accounts when finished

Monitor Your Credit

  • Check credit reports annually (free at AnnualCreditReport.com)
  • Consider credit monitoring service
  • Review credit card and bank statements monthly
  • Set up account alerts for transactions
  • Check credit score regularly

Be Cautious Online

  • Don't click suspicious links in emails
  • Verify website security (https://)
  • Use secure WiFi for financial transactions
  • Be wary of phishing attempts
  • Limit personal information on social media

Secure Physical Documents

  • Shred financial documents and junk mail
  • Secure or lock mailbox
  • Pick up mail promptly
  • Opt out of prescreened credit offers (OptOutPrescreen.com)
  • Store important documents in safe place

Protect Your Devices

  • Keep software and apps updated
  • Use antivirus software
  • Lock devices with PIN/password/biometrics
  • Encrypt sensitive data
  • Back up important files

Additional Resources

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