In The News
Identity fraud costs Australia AU$1 billion a year
ZDNet Australia
November 12, 2003
Staff writers
Identity fraud cost the Australian community AU$1.1 billion in
2001/02, according to a report released by a senior Minister who
also acknowledged the rapid subsequent growth of the problem.
The Minister for Justice and Customs, Senator Chris Ellison, said
the report -- compiled by the Securities Industry Research Centre
of the Asia Pacific -- pinpointed identity theft's involvement in
criminal and terrorist activity worldwide.
Ellison said in a statement: "The use of false or stolen identities
underpins fraudulent acts against governments, business and individuals
and can also underpin terrorism, people smuggling rackets and illegal
immigration.
"It is not only individual victims that feel the pain of identity
fraud - the impact also affects the way in which government and
industry provide products and services, which has a flow-on effect
for the entire Australian community.
"False identities lend anonymity to the perpetrators of crime,
which makes tackling identity fraud a major ongoing challenge for
governments and law enforcement agencies.
"Globalisation and e-business mean that transnational information
flows can occur instantly without the need for face-to-face contact
-- and, unfortunately, also means that transactions using stolen
identities can occur quickly and with relative anonymity".
Ellison said a Federal Trade Commission survey in the U.S. calculated
the cost to business and financial institutions to be $US48 billion
last year, with consumers losing $US5 billion, while the UK Cabinet
Office estimates the cost of identity fraud to the UK economy is
at least £1.3 billion in 2000/01."
He said government had released a number of initiatives to deal
with identity fraud, including;
- The development of proposals for a common set of proof-of-identity
documents of higher integrity to be used by government agencies;
- An online document verification service for government agencies,
and
- Enhanced data matching across government agencies to detect
fictitious identities and "cleanse" registers for government
agencies.
Other initiatives at the Commonwealth level, he said, included
SmartGate technology being trialled by the Australian Customs Service
to combat passport fraud, new passports with tamper-proof laminate
and more stringent requirements for proof of identity when applying
for passports.
Ellison also cited a range of collaborative initiatives between
the Commonwealth and state governments, including:
- The Australian Crime Commission's Identity Fraud Register, which
provides valuable intelligence to law enforcement by keeping a
register of identities suspected of being fraudulent;
- The approval by the Board of the Australian Crime Commission
of a Special Intelligence Operation on Identity Fraud, allowing
the ACC to use its coercive powers to assist identity fraud investigations,
as appropriate;
- The High Tech Crime Centre, formed earlier this year, which
involves the Australian Federal Police (AFP) working together
with international counterparts such as the FBI Cyber Crimes Division
to investigate computer-related crimes such as fake Web sites.
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