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We want to make sure our customers
are aware of the dangers of identity
theft. Identity theft occurs when
criminals find a way to steal your
personal or other identifying
information to access your accounts,
open new accounts, apply for credit in
your name, make purchases, and commit
other fraud related crimes.
The best defense against identity theft
is knowledge. The following tips and
information will help you prevent
identity theft:
How you can help prevent identity theft:
Credit and ATM cards and accounts:
- Sign debit and credit cards
immediately after they arrive.
- Track credit, debit and ATM receipts
and never throw them in a public trash
bin.
- Shred all of your receipts and bank
and credit card statements before
disposing of them.
- Keep an eye on your debit or credit
card until the merchant completes your
transaction, and make sure you get your
card back.
- Do not keep passwords or ATM PINs in
your wallet, purse, desk or organizer.
- Monitor your transactions for
unauthorized use. Online Banking makes
it easy to review your transactions
online daily.
- Report any lost or stolen cards
immediately.
- Regularly review your credit report
from all three major credit bureaus to
make sure that new credit card or other
accounts have not been opened in your
name. Credit bureau contact information
is listed below.
- Watch anyone who asks to "swipe" your
credit or debit card. Devices known as
"skimmers" are sometimes used by
counterpersons to copy the identifying
information off a magnetic strip of a
credit or debit card and later added to
a fake card with a blank magnetic strip.
- You can opt-out of pre-approved credit
offers by calling (888) 5-OPT-OUT.
Your Social Security Number:
- Do not have your driver’s license or
Social Security number printed on your
checks.
- Keep your Social Security Card in a
safe place instead of carrying it with
you in your wallet.
Your computer:
- Install and use a firewall on your
personal computers, especially those
connected to the Internet through
high-speed DSL or cable modems. A
firewall helps prevent hackers from
accessing your computer.
- Install virus protection software on
your computer and make sure it is
updated on a regular basis.
- Use the automated update wizards in
your Operating System to download and
install the latest security patches.
- Make sure personal and financial
information stored on your personal
computers are protected with a password.
- Avoid using automatic login features
that save your user name and password;
and always log off when you're finished.
- Choose unique passwords to access your
accounts online. Don't use any part of
your Social Security number, birth date,
middle name, names of spouses, children
or pets, consecutive numbers or anything
else that a thief could easily discover.
Choose passwords that are difficult for
others to guess and use a different
password for each of your online
accounts. Use both letters and numbers.
Do not share your IDs or passwords with
anyone.
- Do not send sensitive personal or
financial information unless it is
encrypted on a secure Web site.
Encryption scrambles the information
being sent over the Internet so others
cannot intercept and capture your
information. Look for the padlock or key
icon at the bottom of your browser, and
make sure the Internet address begins
with "https." This signals that your
information is secure during
transmission.
E-mail:
- Watch out for "phishing" or "spoofing"
e-mails that may appear to be legitimate
messages. The sender attempts to get you
to reveal confidential personal
information that can be used for
identity theft. The First National Bank
of Berryville will not contact you via
email to ask for or to validate any of
your personal information.
- Be alert for email hoaxes and
suspicious phone inquiries. These may
appear to come from a trusted business
or friend, but actually are designed to
trick you into providing sensitive
information, downloading a virus or
jumping to a fraudulent Web site.
- NEVER fill in any information in an
email that contains input fields.
- NEVER open any email attachments, web
links or files if the source are NOT
trustworthy, or CANNOT be confirmed.
U.S. Mail:
- Promptly remove mail from your
mailbox.
- Deposit outgoing mail in post office
collection boxes or at your local post
office rather than in an unsecured
mailbox. Use our free Online Banking
with Bill Pay to send your payments.
Making payments online can help prevent
mail fraud while saving you time and
postage. If you're planning to be away
from home and can't pick up your mail,
call the U.S. Postal Service at (800)
275-8777 to request a vacation hold.
- Pay attention to your billing and
account statement cycles. If regular
bills or statements stop reaching you,
take action. Call the company's customer
service number. Someone may have filed a
false change-of-address notice to divert
your mail.
- Shred all credit card solicitations
you are not interested in.
Everywhere:
- Shred unnecessary financial documents,
including old bank statements, invoices,
charge receipts, checks, unwanted
pre-approved credit offers, and expired
charge cards before disposing of them.
- Shred or secure in a lockbox all
documents with important identifying
information on them. This includes bank
statements, credit card statements, paystubs, insurance claim or payment
forms, other financial documents and
credit reports. Most identity thieves
find the information they need to
perpetrate crimes by going through
people’s trash.
- Don't provide personal or financial
information to anyone unless you
initiated the contact. When you call us,
come to a branch or visit us online, we
may ask for some information to verify
your identity. But we want to assure you
that The First National Bank of
Berryville does not call you or send you
an email asking you to send us a
response containing personal or private
information.
- Never disclose your PIN or password to
anyone and always safeguard it.
What to do if you are a victim of
identity theft
- Notify us at the phone number listed
on your statement, along with any other
financial service providers.
- File a report of identity theft with
your local police.
- Contact one of the three major credit
bureaus to report the incident and ask
to have a fraud alert placed on your
file. Once the credit bureau confirms
your fraud alert, the other two credit
bureaus will be automatically notified
to place fraud alerts, and all three
credit reports will be sent to you free
of charge. Review your credit reports
and notify the bureaus about anything
that looks suspicious.
CREDIT BUREAUS
Equifax - www.equifax.com
To order a report, call: 800-685-1111
To report fraud, call: 800-525-6285/
TDD 800-255-0056 and write:
P.O. Box 740241, Atlanta, GA 30374-0241
Experian - www.experian.com
To order a report, call: 888-EXPERIAN
(397-3742)
To report fraud, call: 888-EXPERIAN
(397-3742)/
TDD 800-972-0322 and write:
P.O. Box 9532, Allen TX 75013
TransUnion - www.transunion.com
To order a report, call: 800-888-4213
To report fraud, call: 800-680-7289/
TDD 877-553-7803; fax: 714-447-6034; or
write:
Fraud Victim Assistance Department,
P.O. Box 6790, Fullerton, CA 92634-6790
For additional valuable information
about identity theft, we recommend that
you visit www.consumer.gov/idtheft/index.html
or call 1-877-IDTHEFT, the FTC’s
toll-free ID Theft Hotline.
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The First National Bank of Berryville has served Carroll County, Arkansas since 1889. Our long history of success has been based on our personalized service and our commitment to the community we serve.Some things never change.
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