Motherโs Day is a special time to celebrate all those kisses and hugs, the rides to the mall, the doctorsโ appointments, the countless soccer-basketball-baseball games, a special note tucked into a pocket or care package sent to camp. But remember sometimes itโs what a person doesnโt do that matters, and some moms are just bad to the bone.
More than 30% of identity theft cases involve a family member or close friend. The reason is simple: access. Whether itโs your mother, father, foster families, siblings, close friends or your spouseโaccess often is the only catalyst needed to turn your credit report into a crime scene. Here are a few examples from the Mommy Dearest files.
Betz Noire
Axton Betz-Hamilton discovered she was an identity theft victim when she rented her first apartment and was told that a deposit was required to turn on the electricity because she had bad credit. She thought she had no credit at all. Her credit report said otherwise. Her assumption at the time was that whoever stole her parentsโ credit a while back had hit hers as well. That is, until the truth came out.
Axtonโs mom, Pamela Betz, died in 2013. Shortly after that, Betz says her father discovered a box that contained credit card statements in Axtonโs name, so he called to razz her about her profligate spending. He then discovered he also had some crazy spending and so did his father, who lived with them. They were all allegedly hit by Mama Betz.
No Cheers for This Mom
Some mothers have a hard time giving their kids space to grow and become their own person. Others can be smothering to the point that the child canโt do anything on their own, but Wendy Brown took it to another level when she showed up for cheerleader tryouts at Ashwaubenon High School in Wisconsin.
With her daughter living in another state with family, Brown, 33, decided it was time to get her high school diplomaโand it seems while she was at it, get another shot at the high school experience. She was caught by truancy officers and sentenced to three years in a psychiatric hospital.
GI Jane Deferred
Cassidy McKenna had just graduated from high school and was excited about enlisting in the armed forces. But when she signed up, they wouldnโt take her. While itโs generally known that bad credit can affect a soldierโs security clearance, the Armed Forces will also turn down prospective recruits with unpaid debts that are overdue or in collection until the issues are resolved.
McKenna said she didnโt know that she had bad credit. She had always lived at home and had no credit cards. The damage was caused by an outstanding electric bill for $1,755 and another $1,123 owed to a cable provider. When she confronted her mother about the bills, she said her mom went AWOL, only turning up at the Kerr County Courthouse where she was answering McKennaโs theft charges against her.
Apple of Her Eye?
Mom and alleged fraudster Kristina Anh Giusti, 44, of Garden Grove, Calif., first attracted the attention of the Chino Hills Police Department after an investigation into $800 in fraudulent credit card charges at local retailers. Investigators say the evidence they collected points to Giusti making the charges.
According to CBS Los Angeles, police found โaltered credit cards issued in the suspectโs name, six laptops, two tablets, an embossing machine, and a tip card machine used for forging credit cards. [โฆ] Detectives also found a card encoder, several boxes of white stock credit cards, a money counterโ and $11,000 in cash. Police allege the woman had two accomplices โฆ one of them her daughter.
โIn the Family Wayโ Fraud
Hairdresser Jennifer Perik, from DuPage County outside of Chicago, is expecting both a baby and a criminal trial in the months to come. If the charges stick, she will join the ranks of identity-thief moms.
Perik is accused of making $6,000 in fraudulent charges on a Discover card that belonged her hair client, a 94-year-old woman. Investigators say that more than half that amount went to a sperm bank with offices in Virginia and Maryland that boasts high-quality donors. At a bond reduction hearing, Assistant Stateโs Attorney Diane Michalak said that Perik was seven weeks pregnant, but that it was not known if the pregnancy was the result of in vitro fertilization.
Weโre always talking about identity theft being the third certainty in life, yet the crime almost always takes victims by surprise โ all the more if the perp is Mom. Itโs always a good idea to take protective measures to reduce your risk, but even then itโs impossible to entirely prevent the crime from happening. You can, however, reduce the damage from fraud by detecting it as quickly as possible. Check your financial statements โ ideally online, every day โ for any fraudulent charges, and dispute anything you didnโt authorize. Request your credit reports, which you can get for free once a year, to look for new accounts that you donโt recognize. And your credit scores serve as your snapshot of your credit health โ by tracking them over time, you can catch any big, unexpected changes that may be a sign of a big, unexpected problem. You can get your credit scores for free from many sources, including Credit.com.
This Motherโs Day, celebrate the women who have done so much for usโand thank your lucky stars that your mom isnโt a fraudster. Or is she?โฆ Maybe wait until Monday to investigate.
More on Identity Theft:
- Identity Theft: What You Need to Know
- How Do I Dispute an Error on My Credit Report?
- What Should I Do If Iโm a Victim of Identity Theft?
Image: iStock
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