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Residents Of Teaneck Falling Prey To ‘Outbreak’ Of ID Theft, Credit Card Fraud


Thieves are very busy preying on residents of Teaneck, New Jersey.

The problem is being called an epidemic of identity theft and credit card fraud with more than 200 victims and counting.

The small police force in the town has been swamped with complaints over the past couple days.

“This has really been like an outbreak here in Teaneck,” Councilmember Elie Katz told CBS 2’s Dave Carlin.

Rachel Schechter was shopping in Paramus on Tuesday while thieves were doing the same thing in Florida with her stolen credit card number. The fraud triggered an immediate red flag for Chase Bank and Schechter got a call.

“There was my charges plus their charges,” Schechter told Carlin.

A similar incident has also happened to Councilmember Katz. The number for his Citibank credit card was stolen and used for hotels in the Midwest.

“They need to find a common denominator between the different charges,” he said. “My mother had the same issue and some of her friends.”

As a result, Katz sent out a mass email, warning Teaneck residents to check their accounts.

“You don’t want to use your credit cards anymore because you don’t know who’s getting the numbers,” one resident said.

Some of the victims, acting as amateur detectives, thought they had it narrowed down to stores on one block of Teaneck, but they came to find out other victims who reported issues had never shopped in the area.

“It’s a real mystery,” said Lindsey Mejia.

Criminals may be stealing account information out of people’s mailboxes and victims are being urged to first call their credit card companies and then police.

Authorities want people to pass along all the information to help cops connect the dots, close this case and charge the criminals.

Identity theft experts also said everyone should protect themselves by reviewing statements carefully, verifying mailing addresses with the post office and financial institutions and monitoring credit reports.

(Source: WCBSTV)



2 Responses

  1. I’d be willing to bet the common thread is not a store but either a yeshiva, shul, or tzedaka of some kind. Many of these places are absolutely awful at securing the credit card numbers they collect. One Yeshiva I fundraised for gave me sheets of past donors to call for the new fundraising campaign – with their full credit card numbers from last year printed at the top of each sheet. I had their name, address, cc# and expiration date in my hands.

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