http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-532826,00.html


The Sunday Times - Britain

January 05, 2003
Ministers to act on huge rise in stolen identities
Jon Ungoed-Thomas and Edin Hamzic

THE identity of David Blunkett has been "stolen" by a reporter who was able
to use a copy of the home secretary's birth certificate to obtain a
provisional driving licence. Blunkett's name and date of birth appear on
the licence.

The use of the certificate, legally obtained, to get a licence in
Blunkett's name has highlighted the growing threat posed by identity fraud.
The government is now planning new laws to curb the practice.

Last night, Beverley Hughes, the Home Office minister, said measures could
include tighter checks on the identity of those seeking copies of birth
certificates and other documents.

"If we are to protect people better from this growing threat, we would need
to make more stringent checks," said Hughes.

The hijacking by conmen of victims' details, usually to obtain fake
documents or steal money, has tripled in the past two years, according to
new figures. Banks, building societies and financial institutions reported
more than 40,000 cases of identity fraud in 2002 compared with fewer than
13,000 cases in 2000.

Conmen often create new identities by trawling through bins, collecting
bills and bank statements that can be used to build up the false identity.

A birth certificate can be obtained with no requirement to prove identity.
The name on the certificate can be entered on the electoral roll with no
checks. Utility bills and a driving licence can then be obtained.

Henri Cash, 45, a West Sussex businessman, fell victim to a conman who ran
up 30,000 pounds of debts in his name after "stealing" his identity.

"This person was allowed to use my credit history without any proper
checks," said Cash.

In a BBC1 investigation to be shown on Wednesday, the journalist

 Paul Kenyon, who obtained the Blunkett driving licence, also managed to
get a licence and bank account in the name of Frederick Forsyth.

The Day of the Jackal, Forsyth's novel that was made into a film in 1973,
featured an assassin who assumed the identity of a dead child.

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Internet trivia, 20th anniv: http://www.garlic.com/~lynn/rfcietff.htm

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