Consumer Safety Tips That Reduce Your Exposure To Fraud
Traveling out of the CountrY?
If you are traveling outside the United States and you are planning to use your United 1st VISA Debit or Credit Card, please let us know. We have blocked the use of United 1st Cards in some countries. It is important if you plan to travel out of the country to notify us. Contacting us before you travel out of the country will allow us to remove a block and monitor your card activity.
Monotoring Your Cards
The best way to monitor the activity on your debit card is through CU Online. Log in and look at the transactions on your Draft Account. If there is something that you did not authorize, call us or the Lost/Stolen Number IMMEDIATELY.
To monitor your VISA Card, scroll down and look at the Credit Card Account. If your total is higher than you think it should be, go to the home page and click on Resources and Links and go to eZCardInfo and look at the transactions for that card. If things are not the way they should be, call us or VISA immediately.
United 1st encourages everyone to be proactive in the security of your personal information. As we all know, every piece of paper with personal information on it is a potential security breach. Please consider enrolling in Bill Pay and e-Statements. Those two services eliminate a lot of paper.
If you have questions, contact us.
Debit Card Scam and Fake Phone Calls
Debit card scams are in full swing. Please be aware that phone calls, automated or live, asking you to enter your debit card number for any reason, are fraudulent attempts of gaining your information. Many have reported of receiving these scamming phone calls in the middle of the night. Remember this is not something United 1st will do. If you have already given your information out, contact us as soon as possible. If you have responded to this email, call us. We will close your card, and issue you a new one.
A Brand New Way To Steal Your Money
One of our members received the following e-mail in her inbox:

It is a SCAM, a Phishing attempt. If you receive one of these, DO NOT CALL THE NUMBER. Neither CUNA nor United 1st emails our members about debit or credit cards. If you have responded to this email, call us. We will close your card and issue you a new one.
ID
Theft
Identity theft
is America's fastest growing crime. Last year alone, more than 9.9
million Americans were victims of identity theft, a crime that cost
those victims around $5 billion dollars. Identity theft can involve
credit card fraud, Internet fraud, or mail theft, among many other
crimes.
Identity theft
is a serious crime. It occurs when someone uses your personal information
such as your name, social security number, or other identifying
information, without your permission to commit fraud or other crimes.
Identity thieves may use a variety of methods to obtain your personal
information which may include "dumpster diving", stealing
your wallet or purse, mail theft, or computer hacking. People whose
identities have been stolen can spend months or years trying to
clean up the financial mess that thieves have made of their good
name and credit record.
If you think
that you have been the victim of identity theft, immediately contact
your financial institution! Contact the three credit bureaus and
have a fraud alert placed on your accounts. File a police report
with your local authority and keep detailed records.
How
to Protect Your Personal Information
- Be suspicious
if someone contacts you unexpectedly and asks for your personal
information. Most legitimate companies and agencies do not operate
this way.
- Do not click
on links in emails that ask you to provide personal information.
To check whether an email or call is really from the company or
agency, call the company directly or go to its web site (use a
search engine to find it).
- Do not provide
personal information (such as Social Security number, account
numbers, PINs, passwords, and so on) via phone, email or otherwise
unless you initiated the contact with a trusted partner.
- If someone
contacts you via phone or email and says you’ve been the
victim of fraud, verify the person’s identity, and contact
the organization directly before you provide any personal information.
- If you mange
any of your financial accounts online, choose passwords that are
difficult for others to guess and use a different password for
each of your online accounts. Change the password frequently.
- Make sure
the Web sites on which you transact business post privacy and
security statements. Be sure to review them carefully.
- Do not send
sensitive personal or financial information unless it is encrypted
on a secure web site. Regular emails are not encrypted. Look for
the padlock symbol on the bottom bar of the browser to ensure
that the site is running in secure mode before you enter sensitive
information.
- Check all
your monthly statements to verify all transactions.
- Check your
credit report twice a year and examine it thoroughly. This will
reveal accounts that have been opened without your knowledge.
- Add a statement
to your credit file that prohibits the granting of credit without
calling you to confirm the application.
- Record the
names, account numbers and customer service numbers of all the
cards you carry. This way you will have all the necessary information
you need if you have to cancel your cards immediately.
- Make it
difficult for thieves to get “identifying information”
from your mail and mailbox. Take envelopes containing checks and
other sensitive information directly to the post office instead
of leaving them in your mailbox.
- Shred or
secure in a lockbox all documents with important identifying information
on them, such as bank statements, credit card statements, pre-approved
credit card offers and pay stubs.
- Carry only
the credit card you want to use in an emergency. Do not carry
your Social Security card.
- Update your
personal computer with security patches and install anti-virus
software.
What
to Do if You Fall Victim
Contact United
1st and other financial institutions where you conduct your business
and alert them to your situation.
If you experience
fraudulent activity on your United 1st account, please notify us
so we can take the necessary precautions to prevent further activity
and then file a police report with your local authorities. Submit
a copy of the police report to us and then you will need to complete
the necessary documentation in order for us to credit your account
for the fraudulent transaction and to determine what other steps
may be necessary. In some cases, it may be necessary to close your
account and establish a new account to prevent further fraudulent
activity.
If you have
disclosed sensitive information in a phishing attack, you should
also contact all three major credit bureaus and place a fraud alert
on your file at each credit bureau, which will help prevent thieves
from opening a new account in your name. Below is the contact information
for each bureau’s fraud division:
Equifax
800-525-6285
PO Box 740250
Atlanta, Georgia 30374
Experian
888-397-3742
PO Box 1017
Allen, Texas 75013
TransUnion
800-680-7289
PO Box 6790
Fullerton, California 92634
Report all
suspicious contacts to the Federal Trade Commission through the
Internet at www.consumer.gov/idtheft or by calling 877-IDTHEFT
Where
Can You Go For Help?
If you suspect
that you’ve given your information to a phisher, it’s
important for you to act immediately.
If you inadvertently
provided your account numbers, passwords or PINs to a phisher, there
are things you can do to protect your financial accounts. For information
on how you can put a “fraud alert” on your files at
the credit reporting bureaus, and for other advice for ID theft
victims, contact the Federal Trade Commission’s ID Theft Clearinghouse
by visiting www.consumer.gov/idtheft, or call 877-438-4338.
Even if you
didn’t get hooked, you should report any phishing attempts
by contacting the National Fraud Information Center/Internet Fraud
Watch. Visit www.fraud.org or call 800-876-7060. You should also
alert the company the phisher was impersonating, and their local
law enforcement agency.
Additional
Resources about Phishing and Identity Theft
Phishing
Home of the Anti-Phishing Working Group | www.antiphishing.org
How Not to Get Hooked by a “Phishing” Scam | www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/alerts/phishingalrt.htm
Better Business Bureau Phishing Phacts | www.bbb.org/phishing/
Identity
Theft
Department of Justice’s Web Resources on Identity Theft and
Identity Fraud | www.usdoj.gov/criminal/fraud/idtheft.html
Identity Theft Resources from the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse | www.privacyrights.org/identity.htm
Identity Theft Resource Center, a nonprofit organization | www.idtheftcenter.org
Victims’
Resources
Identity Theft Prevention & Survival | www.identitytheft.org
Department of Justice’s Web Resources on Identity Theft and
Identity Fraud | www.usdoj.gov/criminal/fraud/idtheft.html
Identity Theft Resource Center | www.idtheftcenter.org
Federal Trade Commission’s ID Theft Clearinghouse | www.consumer.gov/idtheft
Don't Get Lured In by Phishing Scamsters
Hundreds of consumers have found themselves the victims of an e-mail scam known as "phishing." It involves high-tech fraudsters who pretend to be a legitimate financial institution or credit card company. Hiding behind the anonymity of the Internet, the fraudsters send out "official-looking" e-mails designed to trick consumers into divulging financial and personal information including as account numbers, passwords, user names, Social Security Numbers, and other sensitive, non-public data.
In most cases, the e-mails claim there is an account problem or warns of a possible account fraud threat. Either way the whole idea is to convince the consumer there is an immediate need to update their financial information. Sometime the e-mail has an e-mail reply link but most often this link is to a forged, on-line form that looks almost like a legitimate one - only the web address has been slightly changed to direct the users to a site containing the forged form.
If you receive e-mail from United 1st Federal Credit Union or any financial institution requesting financial information or any other personal or sensitive data please do the following:
- Treat the e-mail with suspicion.
- Do not reply to the e-mail or respond by clicking on a link within the e-mail message. Neither United 1st Federal Credit Union nor any federal financial agency such as the Department of Treasury, Internal Revenue Service, Federal Reserve Bank or National Credit Union Administration will never ask you to provide any kind of confidential or financial details via an e-mail request. The same applies to most other financial institutions including credit card companies and banks.
- Contact United 1st Federal Credit Union as soon as possible to report the suspicious e-mail. You can reach our Members Services by calling (912) 882-4630 or visiting us on the Internet at www.united1stfcu.org. Also if members believe they have been a victim of a fraudulent scheme or identity theft they may also contact the Federal Trade Commission at www.ftc.gov.
Submitting financial or personal information through a website where the member has initiated the contact, such as logging on to our United 1st Federal Credit Union Personal Credit Union Online, is generally safe. But while doing so we suggest members look for the "lock" icon on the browser's status bar as well as looking to insure that "https" is in the beginning of the website's address. Both of these indicate that the information being entered is secure during transmission.
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