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Identity Theft

With a Foreword by Senator Maria Cantwell- Second Printing

by David A. May (Author) James E. Headley (Author)
©2004 Textbook XIV, 142 Pages
Series: Studies in Crime and Punishment, Volume 13

Summary

Although a relatively new crime, identity theft has dramatically increased in occurrence and severity since the early 1990s. By definition, identity theft is the obtainment and fraudulent use of another person’s personal information, which can be relatively innocuous or much more serious. A talented criminal can take another individual’s social security number, credit card information, checks, or other personal information, and use that information to impersonate the individual, manipulating a system that increasingly relies on nonpersonal identifiers. The political, legal, and criminal justice systems are struggling to catch up with the identity theft epidemic, while struggling with the technology that gives rise to it.

Details

Pages
XIV, 142
Year
2004
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820458441
Language
English
Keywords
electronic ID digital native new crimes digital fingerprint person¿s personal information security number crime
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2004. XIV, 142 pp., 5 fig., 1 table

Biographical notes

David A. May (Author) James E. Headley (Author)

The Authors: David A. May received his Ph.D. in Political Science from Washington State University and is currently in the Department of Government at Eastern Washington University. James E. Headley received his J.D. from Gonzaga University’s School of Law in Spokane, Washington and is currently in the Department of Government at Eastern Washington University.

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Title: Identity Theft