http://money.cnn.com/2005/06/16/news/economy/security_fdic/index.htm?cnn=yes

Fed bank insurer's worker data breached
Personal information of thousands of FDIC employees accessed, some possibly
used for fraud.
June 16, 2005: 4:11 PM EDT

NEW YORK (CNN) - The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which insures many of
the nation's banks, has alerted 6,000 current and former employees that
personal information may have been released and that some individuals could
be the victims of identity theft.

In a letter dated last Friday and obtained by CNN, the FDIC told employees
that anyone employed at the agency since July 2002 may be affected. It said
that names, birth dates, Social Security numbers and account information
may have been breached.

The letter instructs employees to "remain vigilant over the next 12-24
months, and promptly report incidents of suspected identity theft to the
local police and the credit bureaus."

Paul Resson, a spokesman for the FDIC, told CNN that the FBI is
investigating the security breach along with the FDIC's own internal
investigators.

According to the letter sent to employees, the unauthorized release of the
data apparently occurred in early 2004, and included information on all
FDIC employees in an official pay status with the insurer as of July 2002.

In a small number of cases, the letter states, the information is known to
have been used to obtain fraudulent loans from a credit union.

Resson declined to comment on why the insurer took so long to notify its
employees of the breach, referring the question to the FBI. The FBI did not
immediately return calls seeking comment.

The FDIC also declined to say which credit union was involved, nor comment
on the number of FDIC employees whose data was used fraudulently, citing
the investigation.

American Banker reported Thursday, in its online edition, that the credit
union was NIH Federal Credit Union, located in Maryland.

American Banker said that Lindsay Alexander, the chief executive of NIH,
told it that an employee of NIH had opened accounts in the late summer or
early fall of last year using the identities of the FDIC employees, and
took out 28 fraudulent loans in their names.

The loans were worth between $10,000 and $18,000 and were not backed up
with collateral, American Banker report Alexander as saying. She said one
of the defrauded individuals contacted NIH in March about something
suspicious, American Banker reported, and the credit union began
investigating before notifying federal employees.

When reached by phone Thursday afternoon, Alexander declined to confirm her
comments to American Banker, telling CNN, "I am not at liberty to discuss
details. This is an active investigation, and I don't want to jeopardize
it."

The FDIC insures many of the nations banks and their account holders
against failures. It was formed in 1933 in response to the thousands of
bank failures that occurred in the 1920s and 1930s.

Today, the FDIC insures more than $3 trillion of deposits in U.S. banks and
thrifts with insurance funds totaling more than $44 billion, according to
its Web site.



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