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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, September 6, 2008

You can get free credit monitoring if you sign up by Sept. 24

By Michelle Singletary

In a class action settlement, the credit bureau TransUnion has agreed to provide free credit-monitoring services to millions of consumers to settle claims it illegally passed along private information for marketing purposes.

Although TransUnion denied any wrongdoing, the settlement requires the company to sign up consumers for either six months or nine months of monitoring.

Now unless you've been a conscientious objector to all forms of borrowing in the last 21 years, you're probably eligible for the monitoring service. But the deadline to sign up is fast approaching.

You have until Sept. 24 to register for benefits under the settlement. Any consumer who had an open credit account or an open line of credit from a credit grantor is eligible. The types of credit might include a car loan, bank credit card, retail store credit card, finance company loan, a mortgage or student loan. The credit account had to be opened between Jan. 1, 1987, and May 28, 2008.

The lawsuit against TransUnion alleged it had violated the Federal Fair Credit Reporting Act.

The settlement was preliminarily approved by a federal court in Chicago in May after nearly 10 years. TransUnion said it discontinued the practice in question in 2001.

As class action lawsuits go, this isn't such a bad one. Typically in these cases, consumers end up with laughable and or ludicrous settlements.

In this case, there is no limit on the number of class members who may receive the temporary monitoring service. To register for this settlement go to www.ListClassAction.com or call 866-416-3470.

Under the settlement, which still needs final approval, you have to choose one of the following options:

  • Six months of credit monitoring.

  • A cash payment (if money is available for distribution).

  • Six months of credit monitoring and a potential cash payment.

  • Nine months of enhanced monitoring service. If you select this option, you can't get any cash.

    Although more than a 150 million consumers are potentially eligible, only a fraction have signed up for the monitoring service, according to Chris Micheletti, an attorney with the law firm of Zelle, Hofmann, Voelbel, Mason & Gette LLP, which is representing plaintiffs in the class action case against TransUnion.

    Micheletti said that as of Aug. 22, about 380,000 people had registered for a cash payment or monitoring services or both.

    The six months of credit monitoring services retails for $59.75 and includes the ability to lock your credit report so third parties, such as lenders or other companies, will not be able to access your credit report without your consent (unless allowed by law). This option also allows you unlimited daily access to your TransUnion credit report and credit score.

    The nine months of enhanced credit monitoring retails for $115.50 and includes all the services listed for the six-month option. You also get insurance scores and a mortgage simulator service.

    If you were thinking about signing up for a credit monitoring service, here is your chance to try it out. I had a monitoring service for a year but didn't find it very helpful.

    The downside to this service is that you're contacted about a potential or a real identity theft problem after the fact. Credit monitoring is fraud detection, rather than protection against it.

    Reach Michelle Singletary at singletarym@washpost.com.