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Consumer Affairs

Identity Theft Tops Complaints to FTC for 12th Year

Agency received nearly 280,000 identity theft complaints last year


PhotoThe Federal Trade Commission today released its list of top consumer complaints received by the agency in 2011. For the 12th year in a row, identity theft complaints topped the list. Of more than 1.8 million complaints filed in 2011, 279,156 or 15 percent, were identity theft complaints.

Nearly 25 percent of the identity theft complaints related to tax- or wage-related fraud.

The report breaks out complaint data on a state-by-state basis and also contains data about the 50 metropolitan areas reporting the highest per capita incidence of fraud and other complaints. In addition, the 50 metropolitan areas reporting the highest incidence of identity theft are noted.

The next nine complaint categories are:

 NumberPercent
Debt Collection Complaints180,92810 percent
Prizes, Sweepstakes, and Lotteries100,2086 percent
Shop-at-Home and Catalog Sales98,3065 percent
Banks and Lenders89,3415 percent
Internet Services81,8055 percent
Auto Related Complaints77,4354 percent
Imposter Scams73,2814 percent
Telephone and Mobile Services70,0244 percent
Advance-Fee Loans and Credit Protection/Repair47,4143 percent

The FTC enters complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to more than 2,000 civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the United States and abroad. Enforcers search the database to research cases, track targets, and identify victims.

"The FTC's Consumer Sentinel Network is an incredibly powerful tool for law enforcers who are working to protect consumers and go after the bad guys," said David Vladeck, Director of the agency's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "It's used by agencies across the country and around the world to enhance their enforcement efforts."

Other federal and state law enforcement agencies contribute complaints to the Consumer Sentinel Network, including the U. S. Postal Inspection Service, the Department of Justice's Internet Crime Complaint Center, and the Offices of the Idaho, Michigan, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Tennessee, and Washington Attorneys General. Private-sector organizations that contribute complaints include all U.S. and Canadian members of the Better Business Bureau, Western Union and Moneygram, and the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

"The Consumer Sentinel Network is a treasure trove of information for law enforcers," said Richard Cordray, Director of the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. "We plan to contribute consumer complaints we receive at the CFPB to the Network and urge other state and local law enforcers to join the Network, too."


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