Stolen Trash

jflail2
jflail2 Posts: 2,868
edited February 2008 in The Clubhouse
So I wake up this morning, brew up some coffee and step out onto the porch to see what the weather's going to be like. I look down at the road, and then look again. my trash can is still there, but the 2 extra bags of trash that were laying beside it are now gone......

My first thought, who the hell steals someone's trash? And then visions of identity theft danced through my head.

Anyone had this happen before? Any recommendations for preventative measures against identity theft? Has anyone tried any of the companies that "protect" you for a monthly fee? I've seen commercials with that guy riding around NYC with his SSN on the side of a big truck, and it seemed convincing from that stand point.

Damn, this is an annoying way to start the day. I guess priority #1 is to go get a shredder after work today :(
2007 Club Polk Football Pool Champ

2010 Club Polk Fantasy Football Champ

2011 Club Polk Football Pool Champ


"It's like a koala bear crapped a rainbow in my brain!"
Post edited by jflail2 on
«1

Comments

  • Systems
    Systems Posts: 14,873
    edited February 2008
    Its BIG Brother watching you. I now shred all my mail I trash. Bills, junk mail and anything with my name on it.

    Chuck
    Testing
    Testing
    Testing
  • nms
    nms Posts: 671
    edited February 2008
    Did you have anything that could be used as identity theft in there? (Old credit cards, bank correspondence, etc)
    My system

    "The world is an ever evolving clusterf*ck." --treitz3
  • edbert
    edbert Posts: 1,041
    edited February 2008
    jflail2 wrote: »
    I guess priority #1 is to go get a shredder after work today :(

    Easiest way right there. The best is not to get the mail at all. There is a way that you can send in a letter or form somewhere to help you opt out of all that junk mail that you get. I'll see if I can find it.
    I know just enough to be dangerous, but don't tell my wife, she thinks I'm a genius. :D

    Pioneer VSX-816
    Monitor 40's - fronts, bi-amped
    Monitor 30's - surrounds
    CS1 - center
    PSW10 - I'll let you guess
    Blue Jeans Cable - speaker cable
    Daewoo 27 incher - one step up from a console
    Sony Progressive scan DVD
    XBOX

    SOPA since 2008
    Here's my stuff.
  • jflail2
    jflail2 Posts: 2,868
    edited February 2008
    stereo: I doubt big brother cares what goes on in the hills of NC :)

    nms: I don't think so, but I'm not 100% sure. Most of my banking/bill pay is done online now, so if anything I think there were just credit card offers and other junk mail. That being said, I have no idea what my girl threw away in those 2 bags...

    If anyone thinks there is specific, pre-emptive action I should be taking, by all means send the advice on.

    Thanks.
    2007 Club Polk Football Pool Champ

    2010 Club Polk Fantasy Football Champ

    2011 Club Polk Football Pool Champ


    "It's like a koala bear crapped a rainbow in my brain!"
  • nms
    nms Posts: 671
    edited February 2008
    If anyone thinks there is specific, pre-emptive action I should be taking, by all means send the advice on.

    Call your CC companies and tell them to be alert for any strange purchases? I dunno, what else do identity thieves steal these days?
    My system

    "The world is an ever evolving clusterf*ck." --treitz3
  • RuSsMaN
    RuSsMaN Posts: 17,987
    edited February 2008
    Why is it 'identity theft', isn't it just plain old fraud?

    I burn everything to do with anything financial around here.
    Check your lips at the door woman. Shake your hips like battleships. Yeah, all the white girls trip when I sing at Sunday service.
  • jflail2
    jflail2 Posts: 2,868
    edited February 2008
    RuSsMaN wrote: »
    Why is it 'identity theft', isn't it just plain old fraud?

    I burn everything to do with anything financial around here.

    Whatever the wording, I don't want some jobless joker to end up with a high limit visa in my name because he was low enough to dig through my trash...

    I guess thats the 1st thing I'll do nms.

    Could be much ado about nothing, but I'd rather be safe than sorry, if at all possible.
    2007 Club Polk Football Pool Champ

    2010 Club Polk Fantasy Football Champ

    2011 Club Polk Football Pool Champ


    "It's like a koala bear crapped a rainbow in my brain!"
  • shack
    shack Posts: 11,154
    edited February 2008
    A cheap document shreader works very well. Anything that has anything that could be used is shreaded before it goes in the trash...AND...we take our trash directly to the trash collection center and don't use the trash collection subscription service in our area.
    "Just because you’re offended doesn’t mean you’re right." - Ricky Gervais

    "For those who believe, no proof is necessary. For those who don't believe, no proof is possible." - Stuart Chase

    "Consistency requires you to be as ignorant today as you were a year ago." - Bernard Berenson
  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited February 2008
    At the very least keep an eye on your credit report.

    And talk to shack. :)
    If you will it, dude, it is no dream.
  • AndyGwis
    AndyGwis Posts: 3,655
    edited February 2008
    Does checking your credit every so often lower your credit score?

    I'm also a little wearry of identity theft. Too much crap around my office that other people have access to, and I somehow lost a birth certificate from my office or apartment in the past 2 years which has me a bit concerned.

    Do you just call equifax / etc. and have them run it for you?
    Stereo Rig: Hales Revelation 3, Musical Fidelity CD-Pre 24, Forte Model 3 amp, Lexicon RT-10 SACD, MMF-5 w/speedbox, Forte Model 2 Phono Pre, Cardas Crosslink, APC H15, URC MX-950, Lovan Stand
    Bedroom: Samsung HPR-4252, Toshiba HD-A2, HK 3480, Signal Cable, AQ speaker cable, Totem Dreamcatchers, SVS PB10-NSD, URC MX-850
  • phuz
    phuz Posts: 2,372
    edited February 2008
    AndyGwis wrote: »
    Does checking your credit every so often lower your credit score?

    I'm also a little wearry of identity theft. Too much crap around my office that other people have access to, and I somehow lost a birth certificate from my office or apartment in the past 2 years which has me a bit concerned.

    Do you just call equifax / etc. and have them run it for you?

    No. Sometimes it can actually help.

    You can get all 3 reports once a year for free at annualcreditreport.com

    http://www.ftc.gov/freereports

    Lots of credit card companies as well as the 3 credit bureaus have services that let you pull your reports for a small monthly fee. I can pull mine once a day for $9.99 a month through American Express.
  • ohskigod
    ohskigod Posts: 6,502
    edited February 2008
    you can get the shredder and be careful as hell and still have your identity stolen so I wouldnt lose sleep over the missing garbage.

    I run my credit bureaus periodically, its the best way to cover yourself. something popes up you dont recognize, its still a PITA, but at least your catching it early, making it a far less PITA then catching it late.

    I do the credit monitoring on Freecreditreport as wel, they notify me of any changes on my bureaus
    Living Room 2 Channel -
    Schiit SYS Passive Pre. Jolida CD player. Songbird streamer. California Audio Labs Sigma II DAC, DIY 300as1/a1 Ice modules Class D amp. LSi15 with MM842 woofer upgrade, Nordost Blue Heaven and Unity interconnects.

    Upstairs 2 Channel Rig -
    Prometheus Ref. TVC passive pre, SAE A-205 Amp, Wiim pro streamer and Topping E50 DAC, California Audio Labs DX1 CD player, Von Schweikert VR3.5 speakers.

    Studio Rig - Scarlett 18i20(Gen3) DAW, Mac Mini, Aiyma A07 Max (BridgedX2), Totem Mites
  • shack
    shack Posts: 11,154
    edited February 2008
    There is a "hard" credit report and a "soft" credit report. The hard is when you apply for a loan or an existing creditor pulls your credit to update files, etc. It "counts" against your score. The soft is when you check or someone wanting to solicit loans pulls credit. It doesn't hurt you.
    "Just because you’re offended doesn’t mean you’re right." - Ricky Gervais

    "For those who believe, no proof is necessary. For those who don't believe, no proof is possible." - Stuart Chase

    "Consistency requires you to be as ignorant today as you were a year ago." - Bernard Berenson
  • edbert
    edbert Posts: 1,041
    edited February 2008
    If you are really worried about identity theft you can request a fraud alert with all three credit agencies. Basically what it does is require them to contact you if someone actually tries to use your SSN to apply for any type of credit where someone pulls a, as shack put it "hard," credit report. You just have to make sure that it is a good phone number. I used my cell phone so that if I needed to apply for a loan, and they called to verify, I would have the phone on me. The service is free and if you have been the victim of identity theft or fraud, you are covered. It really isn't all that inconvenient and just adds a lot of security.
    I know just enough to be dangerous, but don't tell my wife, she thinks I'm a genius. :D

    Pioneer VSX-816
    Monitor 40's - fronts, bi-amped
    Monitor 30's - surrounds
    CS1 - center
    PSW10 - I'll let you guess
    Blue Jeans Cable - speaker cable
    Daewoo 27 incher - one step up from a console
    Sony Progressive scan DVD
    XBOX

    SOPA since 2008
    Here's my stuff.
  • jflail2
    jflail2 Posts: 2,868
    edited February 2008
    Great, thanks for the good insight guys. Sounds like my 1st stop is a shredder, and then a couple of calls to my cc company and bank. I'll have to call for the fraud alert as well, thanks edbert.
    2007 Club Polk Football Pool Champ

    2010 Club Polk Fantasy Football Champ

    2011 Club Polk Football Pool Champ


    "It's like a koala bear crapped a rainbow in my brain!"
  • edbert
    edbert Posts: 1,041
    edited February 2008
    My experience with fraud was minor but still a PITA to deal with. They only opened up one credit card through Sam's Club and it was less than a thousand bucks, but still. Getting it cleared up wasn't easy both to verify I was not the one who signed for the card and to then get the bad reporting off my credit reports. Hopefully nothing will come of this, but even if they try, you can at least try to get a pre-emptive strike out there to nip it in the bud.
    I know just enough to be dangerous, but don't tell my wife, she thinks I'm a genius. :D

    Pioneer VSX-816
    Monitor 40's - fronts, bi-amped
    Monitor 30's - surrounds
    CS1 - center
    PSW10 - I'll let you guess
    Blue Jeans Cable - speaker cable
    Daewoo 27 incher - one step up from a console
    Sony Progressive scan DVD
    XBOX

    SOPA since 2008
    Here's my stuff.
  • exalted512
    exalted512 Posts: 10,735
    edited February 2008
    jflail2 wrote: »
    Great, thanks for the good insight guys. Sounds like my 1st stop is a shredder, and then a couple of calls to my cc company and bank. I'll have to call for the fraud alert as well, thanks edbert.

    make sure to get one with a high pages per shred count. mine won't shred entire envelopes with cc offers in them. only thing I don't like about mine is that.
    -cody
    Music is like candy, you have to get rid of the rappers to enjoy it
  • shadowofnight
    shadowofnight Posts: 2,735
    edited February 2008
    Been shredding my personal paperwork before it goes in the trash even before there were dedicated shredders you could pick up at staples.

    It just always made sense to me to not have any of that type of information available ...now even more so with doing a lot of internet purchasing, and with each order you get a printed receipt with everything on it.
    The first rule of Fight Club is you don't talk about Fight Club
  • mhardy6647
    mhardy6647 Posts: 33,691
    edited February 2008
    You can contact any one of the three credit reporting agencies (Equifax, Experian, or the other one) by phone and ask them to put a "fraud alert" on your credit history. If anyone tries to do anything requiring a credit check under your name, the fraud alert will require the bank/credit card company/what have you to contact you (the REAL you) to confirm the transaction. It's good for 3 months, IIRC.

    It's easy and free. Been there, done that.
    They'll try to sell you credit watch services. You're under no obligation to buy in, though.

    EDIT: oops, between the time I started this and finished, you already got this info! sorry.
  • PhantomOG
    PhantomOG Posts: 2,409
    edited February 2008
    exalted512 wrote: »
    make sure to get one with a high pages per shred count. mine won't shred entire envelopes with cc offers in them. only thing I don't like about mine is that.
    -cody

    yeah, I bought a cheapie one at Fry's for $40 a few years ago and the thing overheats after about 10 minutes of use. Wish I would have just invested in a better one, they can get really pricey too.
  • dkg999
    dkg999 Posts: 5,647
    edited February 2008
    For credit monitoring, I would suggest a Credit Expert subscription, it can monitor activity on all three bureaus. Direct mail solicitations rarely, and really shouldn't contain what we refer to as PII (personally identifiable information) outside of the name and address. It's normally your financial and credit card statements someone is after. Dumpster diving for information, stealing trash in nicer neighborhoods, are all activities identity theft perps engage in. Normally you would have others in the neighborhood get their trash stolen also unless someone has specifically targeted you. And it might not be for identity theft? Not sure if personal property theft rings also do that type of thing?
    DKG999
    HT System: LSi9, LSiCx2, LSiFX, LSi7, SVS 20-39 PC+, B&K 507.s2 AVR, B&K Ref 125.2, Tripplite LCR-2400, Cambridge 650BD, Signal Cable PC/SC, BJC IC, Samsung 55" LED

    Music System: Magnepan 1.6QR, SVS SB12+, ARC pre, Parasound HCA1500 vertically bi-amped, Jolida CDP, Pro-Ject RM5.1SE TT, Pro-Ject TubeBox SE phono pre, SBT, PS Audio DLIII DAC
  • tonyb
    tonyb Posts: 32,951
    edited February 2008
    Maybe you make a hellava Tuna salad samwich,and one of your neighbors was feeling lucky.

    I burn all my **** in the fireplace.
    HT SYSTEM-
    Sony 850c 4k
    Pioneer elite vhx 21
    Sony 4k BRP
    SVS SB-2000
    Polk Sig. 20's
    Polk FX500 surrounds

    Cables-
    Acoustic zen Satori speaker cables
    Acoustic zen Matrix 2 IC's
    Wireworld eclipse 7 ic's
    Audio metallurgy ga-o digital cable

    Kitchen

    Sonos zp90
    Grant Fidelity tube dac
    B&k 1420
    lsi 9's
  • candyliquor35m
    candyliquor35m Posts: 2,267
    edited February 2008
    The same thing has been happening to my used cat litter but he's involved in espionage, pretending to be asleep all day my ****.
  • F1nut
    F1nut Posts: 50,447
    edited February 2008
    The same thing has been happening to my used cat litter but he's involved in espionage, pretending to be asleep all day my ****.

    No meds today, eh?
    Political Correctness'.........defined

    "A doctrine fostered by a delusional, illogical minority and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a t-u-r-d by the clean end."


    President of Club Polk

  • shadowofnight
    shadowofnight Posts: 2,735
    edited February 2008
    Could have been a homeless person who wanted to go through it , but didnt want to do it right in front of your house. Happened to me one time...they come at 330 to 4am ....I am up most of the night and myself and the dogs heard noises out front ( Front door usually open ) .

    I go out with bad intentions and ask him WTF are you doing. ? He was extremely polite and told me he only goes through the recycle bin to get stuff to sell to get money to eat...and that he promised not to leave any type of mess....I told him knock yourself out. So thats a possibility....
    The first rule of Fight Club is you don't talk about Fight Club
  • jflail2
    jflail2 Posts: 2,868
    edited February 2008
    Interesting dkg, good feedback. We are in a country setting, and our neighborhood isn't exactly wealthy....maybe we stand out a bit because of that? Looks like we were the only ones. Dunno about the personal property side, but I work from home, so I "pity the fool" who tries to break in here.

    Sorry Tony, we had chicken casserole last night. I wish we had a fireplace, would certainly come in handy for multiple reasons.
    2007 Club Polk Football Pool Champ

    2010 Club Polk Fantasy Football Champ

    2011 Club Polk Football Pool Champ


    "It's like a koala bear crapped a rainbow in my brain!"
  • jflail2
    jflail2 Posts: 2,868
    edited February 2008
    Could have been a homeless person who wanted to go through it , but didnt want to do it right in front of your house. Happened to me one time...they come at 330 to 4am ....I am up most of the night and myself and the dogs heard noises out front ( Front door usually open ) .

    I go out with bad intentions and ask him WTF are you doing. ? He was extremely polite and told me he only goes through the recycle bin to get stuff to sell to get money to eat...and that he promised not to leave any type of mess....I told him knock yourself out. So thats a possibility....

    Wow, you guys are spot on. My girl came home on her lunch break saying the exact same thing. Apparently there are a few homeless folks that stake out a few miles from here, and a guy she works with threw that out as a theory. I hope that's it...
    2007 Club Polk Football Pool Champ

    2010 Club Polk Fantasy Football Champ

    2011 Club Polk Football Pool Champ


    "It's like a koala bear crapped a rainbow in my brain!"
  • shadowofnight
    shadowofnight Posts: 2,735
    edited February 2008
    jflail2 wrote: »
    Wow, you guys are spot on. My girl came home on her lunch break saying the exact same thing. Apparently there are a few homeless folks that stake out a few miles from here, and a guy she works with threw that out as a theory. I hope that's it...


    Haha...they are extremely territorial too...we had an article in the local paper about a fight in the wee hours of the morning...2 rival bums met at one garbage can and both claimed he worked that territory...a bum fight ensued :D It was somewhere else in town...I talk to my guy and its him and his wife. I didnt know a shopping cart had such a load capacity....
    The first rule of Fight Club is you don't talk about Fight Club
  • PhantomOG
    PhantomOG Posts: 2,409
    edited February 2008
    jflail2 wrote: »
    Has anyone tried any of the companies that "protect" you for a monthly fee? I've seen commercials with that guy riding around NYC with his SSN on the side of a big truck, and it seemed convincing from that stand point.

    Be careful with these kinds of companies. They seem to be a rip-off. Most do nothing more than contact the credit agencies once every 3 months to red flag your reports -- something you can do for free.

    Lifelock advertises like that. Read here for a lengthy article about the company and guy who started it. Doesn't sound too good.

    Also from Techdirt:
    LifeLock, a company that sells some identity theft protection services that consumers could get for free, got some bad press last month. Not only did it come out that one of the company's founders had allegedly stolen personal information from customers of another business he owned, it was also disclosed that LifeLock's services failed to protect the company's CEO from identity theft. A man in the Dallas area used the CEO's social security number -- which is prominently displayed in LifeLock's marketing materials -- to obtain a $500 loan, and police were waiting to get some subpoenaed information when the CEO took things into his own hands. He showed up at the fraudster's house with a film crew, and apparently coerced a confession out of the guy, who police say is mentally disabled. The confession is legally worthless, and police and prosecutors say it's tainted the case, so they're not going to proceed with their investigation, and have no plans to arrest the suspect. So, it would appear, that not only do LifeLock's anti-identity theft measures not work, the company also manages to bungle the prosecution of identity thieves.
  • obieone
    obieone Posts: 5,077
    edited February 2008
    $15 gets ya a steel drum. Local supermarket for some old paper bags, VOILA!
    Security issues gone. I burn ANYTHING with an I.D. # attached.-
    C.C. offers "invitation #", anything that someone can fill out with a change of adress form!
    I refuse to argue with idiots, because people can't tell the DIFFERENCE!