YOUR SOUL]
For Michelle Brown, there was life before identity theft and then there was life after identity theft. Life after was a torment.
Brown, the young California woman I began this book with, couldn't understand why someone had stolen her identity. Why her, of all people? And how did it happen? One day she told her property manager about how someone was going around using her name and her credit, and that the police and credit bureaus had mentioned that identity thieves are sometimes a relative or someone you know. Did she have sisters who might have something against her, a close friend with a grudge? She had been offended. She had two sisters, but she knew neither of them was the one, and no friend was that malevolent.
Her property manager listened to her carefully, and then he said, "I know who's doing it."
Or he thought he did. A woman he knew vaguely, Heddi Ille, had a history of committing credit fraud. He figured it might well be she.
The police looked into it, and they concluded that it was indeed she. Heddi Ille was a woman in her early thirties, about five-foot-seven and weighing 200 pounds. She looked nothing like Michelle Brown. And she was mixed up with drugs. For months, the police pursued her, but it wasn't until more than a year after she had stolen Michelle Brown's identity that she was caught, and then it was only because someone had turned her in. To add to the insult, Ille was arrested under the name Michelle Brown. On her record, that name was listed as an alias.
Heddi Ille had never met Michelle Brown, and knew virtually nothing about her. Like most crooks, she had wanted one thing: a vehicle that allowed her to steal. One day, she had happened to sneak a look at the rental applications at the apartment complex where Michelle Brown was living, and had chosen her information to work with. She was a similar age, and that may have been all that mattered. That one document was all it took.
In their arrogance, thieves rarely consider the consequences for the victim. They're in it strictly for the money. For a long time, Michelle Brown wondered if she would ever become whole again. It required a massive effort for her to get her credit straightened out. "Identity theft leaves a very dark and filthy cloud around the victim," she said. Even now, she is extremely circumspect. She has eliminated all but one credit card. She refuses to write checks when she buys something in a store. She worries that her name will be on a list of delinquents and she'll be hustled off by security guards. Her mail comes to a private mailbox. For her birthday, a friend gave her a shredder, and she now shreds all credit card solicitations and any other material containing personal information.
She carries around official papers that confirm who she is, though she's afraid to travel overseas, particularly to any third-world country, out of fear she'll be mistaken for the jailed Ille and be imprisoned. Even in this country, she shudders every time she sees a police car. She drives safely under the speed limit and never forgets to signal if she's making a turn. The last thing she wants is to be stopped and somehow mistaken for the other Michelle Brown, the one who ought to be in prison.
Two years after she started, Heddi Ille was convicted of perjury, grand theft, and possession of stolen property, though, as so often happens, not of identity theft. Not only was she initially booked as Michelle Brown, but also when she sent letters to friends from federal prison she wrote that name on the return address, until the real Michelle Brown objected. She felt Heddi Ille had stolen quite enough from her for long enough.
THE CRIME OF THE FUTURE
I've saved identity theft for last, because I'm convinced it's the crime we have the most to fear going forward. To my mind, identity theft is the crime of the future. And I think of it as the mother of all scams, because it steals everything, a person's very being.
In so many ways, it's the scariest and most seductive white-collar crime of all, and we've barely scratched the surface. It'll probably be ten years from now before identity theft is in full swing, but we've already seen its striking escalation. At the beginning, someone stole your identity because he wanted to get a credit card in your