Updated at 6:06 a.m., Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Hawaii cracking down on military ID theft
Advertiser Staff
United States Attorney Ed Kubo announced Monday that he will be taking a tougher stance when it comes to anyone stealing the identities of military members and their families.In a released statement, Kubo said ID theft and fraud is the fastest growing crime in the U.S.
"In 2003, Hawaii ranked 25th in the nation for identity thefts, but it was second in the nation for frauds committed with stolen identities," Kubo stated in the news release.
Kubo said the situation becomes more egregious when the victim is a military member who is deployed or their dependents back home.
In May, 2006, the Veterans Administration in Washington announced the theft of personal information of approximately 26.5 million veterans, when a VA employee took unauthorized veteran data home, which was later stolen during a burglary. The compromised data include the Social Security Numbers and birth dates of veterans. Although there was no evidence of any fraud committed with this stolen information, "our military families expect us to remain vigilant for these crimes and to prosecute any perpetrators aggressively," Kubo stated.
Kubo said he has met with the Hawaii Field Office Commanders and Special Agents in Charge for the FBI, Army CID, Navy NCIS, and Air Force OSI to discuss the risks to military members and dependents from Identity Theft. Kubo has instructed all military investigative agencies to forward all identity theft investigations to his office for potential federal prosecutions.
Federal law now requires that all perpetrators of aggravated identity thefts receive a mandatory two-year jail sentence, on top of any other sentence imposed for other crimes.
"Anyone who steals the identity and victimizes a military member or his family will now be facing hard federal time. No probation. Period." Kubo said.
If you are a military member or dependent residing in Hawai'i and become a victim of identity theft or fraud, Kubo said to report the incident either to Army CID at 808-655-0401, Navy NCIS at 808-474-1218, Air Force OSI at 808-449-0114, or to the FBI Honolulu Field Office at 808-566-4300.