Identity Thief Forgets to Change Shipping Address, Sends Victims His LootBy 
Matt 
Brownell
A tip for would-be identity thieves: When you buy a bunch of pricey 
merchandise with a stolen card number, make sure you don't accidentally 
ship the stolen goods to your victims.

That's evidently what one thief did after stealing the debit card number of 
an Anchorage, Alaska, couple. According to the *Anchorage Daily News,* Chris 
and Susie Lindford got a call from Credit Union 1 informing them that 
someone had stolen their debit card number and racked up an impressive 
$5,000 in charges in about an hour. The credit union quickly cancelled the 
card and refunded the money; the Linfords got on with their lives, probably 
under the assumption that the thief had made off with a rich bounty of 
merchandise.

And then the packages started arriving on their doorstep: stereo equipment, 
sports memorabilia, martial arts gear and women's jackets, among other 
items. Whoever stole the card apparently used the card's billing address as 
the shipping address, meaning the Lindfords wound up getting the 
merchandise ordered with their stolen card.

It's unclear how this happened. Most retail sites have a box you can check 
that automatically fills in your billing address as your shipping address, 
so it's possible that the thief checked it without thinking through the 
implications. Another possibility is that the thief planned to steal the 
packages off the Linfords' front porch. But the Daily News notes that Susie 
Linford traced the orders back to phone numbers and IP addresses in Kansas 
and Illinois (both of which are around 3,600 miles from Anchorage), which 
makes the latter scenario unlikely.

In any case, the Linfords should count themselves lucky -- not because they 
got a bunch of free merchandise (which they'll probably send back to the 
retailers), but because their credit union was so good about spotting the 
fraud and getting them their money back. While federal law caps 
cardholders' liability for credit card fraud at $50, you can be liable for 
as much as $500 for fraudulent 
purchases<http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/11/03/how-to-protect-your-debit-card-from-thieves/>
 made 
on a stolen debit card. But Credit Union 1 evidently has a zero-liability 
policy for debit card fraud, and it sounds like the Linfords got the money 
back in their account in a timely manner.

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