I am getting a bit worried that I have now had 3 cheques go missing. The first I was able to get the drawer to cancel it pdq because I was expecting it and quried it when it didnt turn up. The other two I have only just realised (thought I was a bit skint!) and they are several weeks old. I think someone is pilfering my mail.
Just to add insult to injury I had a letter delivered on Friday that looked like it might be a cheque (it wasnt) and had been opened!!!
Anyway, I discovered this too late today to phone the drawers to check to see if these cheques had been banked.
This got me to thinking. Obviously no one can bank these cheques as they are account payee and in my name. However, it is surprisinly easy to open an online account without providing any ID (you only need appear on the electoral register) - it would be the easiest thing in the world for someone to open an online account in the name of Miss B Maid at 20 Acacia Avenue (my address, for the avoidance of argument) and then operate it online. Pay the cheques in by posting them to the bank and then go online and transfer the money out.
So, how can I find out if anyone else has any accounts in my name?
There is another method, mainly used by moneylenders. This is usually when the payee does not have a bank account. Thus if someone gets a cheque for a tax rebate but has no bank account, he takes it to a moneylender, signs the back, the moneylender gives him the cash, minus his fee, then pays it into his own account. There are arrangements to do this between banks and certain organisations. This could possibly have happened to you if the cheque has been intercepted.
It might be a good place to start though. They might be able to tell you how the system works and how easy (or not) it would be for someone else to open an account in your name and what checks are done. My debit card was scammed recently and the fraud dept at Lloyds were very helpful and knowledgeable.
This is the curse of my life Hopkirk. Unfortunately, I am dealing with a profession who have only just got used to the idea that Queen Victoria is dead and that quill pens and parchment are out of fashion.........
I know how easy it is to open an online account. I opened one last year when we travelled to Italy and I was concerned about having access to additional cash if stuff was stolen. No checks were performed. Only verification was by mobile. I opened the account online, transferred some money into it. Used the card in Italy, transferred the remainder back to my normal account.
I too would start with your bank fraud sqad and ask them to send a message with Ibuprofen to sister banks asking for such information...with your name, variants and address, they would/could pop something for the police. Have a chat with them too, so as to add gravitas your enquiry.....
Barmaid I live in a small block of flats and we have had a gang taking our mail from our postboxes this year and also about three or so years back. Although the boxes were locked they must have been using an implement to remove the post. Apart from ordering new credit cars in your name, they obtain loans on your behalf and take the money out the minute it lands into your account before you even realise a loan has been taken out. They have to come back several times to follow through their different scams. We have the police onto ours at the moment and I actually met one of the fraudsters in the entrance hall. You need to stop them getting your post for a start.
Well I have just done a credit check and apart from the *** insurance companies who have done about 56,000 searches there is nothing there I didnt know about. My current account is mentioned but none of my others, so who knows what accounts may exist in my name.
My bank cannot help - they suggest Action Fraud.
Ladybirder, I am normally here when the post comes and tend to try and grab it before one of the cats does something unmentionable to it. Tomorrow, however, I may be drop kicking the postman into the lake.......
She bloody well be when Corbyn, Farage, Cameron and Johnson are finished with her, her house on the I of Wight designated as a tomb for our erstwhile Chancellor of the Czechs......