Legal Thriller Author Analyzes Paper Trails Scams
Legal Thriller Author Analyzes Paper Trails Scams
By: Jack Payne
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If 75% of women wear the wrong bra size, and 75% of men wear
shirts
with the wrong sleeve length, is it any wonder that so many people do
not understand paper trails, do not understand their critical roles in
con games? Fraud, shell games, scandal-revelation and creation, and
rip-offs of every kind flower from this tell-tale debris.
And, alas, most importantly, it is essential to understand how all of
this paper trail information is tied together by social security
numbers. (For the intent to rob you blind, this information collecting
method is, obviously, patently illegal. For the lawn mower
manufacturer, in his search for demographics trying to sell you a new
riding mower, however, society seems to feel this is O.K)
Spreading like wildfire, with the aid of an internet stage setting,
what are paper trails anyhow? Let's be more specific.
Simply put, as they might affect you, they are every sort of record,
kept anywhere, that link business transactions back to you. These can
be any paper document such as a bill of sale, promissory note, receipt,
application, resume filing, customs claim, insurance form, notarized
statement, any legal form. These spell out into computer records.
It's largely society's propulsion into the computer / internet era of
the 1990s that has brought about this current-day fleshing out of the
"paper trail." It's now so efficient that the structural schematic of
this thought-police invasion--this total assault on your
privacy--should indeed frighten you. What next? you might ask. Will you
be marked with a tracking device so the government always knows where
you are?
In this day and age it's computers, computers, internet, internet. Far
and wide. They are to blame. It's computer records that pull all these
bits of paper information together, to the delight of con artists.
Examples: Credit card purchase? Computer. Bank deposit? Computer. House
purchase? Computer. And, the list goes on and on. Endlessly.
Take a simple, one-time credit card purchase. This is stored in the
bank's computer, as well as several way stations along the path back to
your bank, in the network's computers. When you deposit cash into your
checking account the information is stored in a computer. when you
deposit cash into your savings account the information is stored in a
computer. when you buy a house you get a triple-whammy, the transaction
is stored in a computer, in paper form, and on microfilm at your county
recorder's office. Every time you turn around and blink these days, it
seems, something about you is recorded in a computer.
And, sad to say, the common link that pulls all of your business
transactions together is your social security number. It is the
commonly used identifier of the present day age. By using only your
social security number the con man can put together a near-total list
of your business transactions stretching back over the years.
So, stealing your ss number--it being the string-tying mechanism which
pulls everything together-- then packaging it neatly and presenting
your financial affairs to the world as the "whole you"--makes it easy
for the con man. These data include such invasion-of-privacy issues as
what assets you have, where you shop, what you buy, and what you owe on
various credit accounts and loans. The skilled con artist knows
precisely how to pull this string.
Unfortunately, too many people today regard this as only a mild
irritation, like talking to robots on the phone while trying to make a
warranty claim on a defective computer. Red flag! It's far more serious
than that So, like it or not, the challenge is on you, to weave, dodge,
confuse, and bewilder any scam artist who might be about to stalk you.
How do you do this? How do you fortify your defenses?
You must disrupt your paper trail. This can partially be done in
several ways, or combination:
1. A long, long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away (seemingly), cash
was used. Stash your credit and debit cards. Earmark them for
occasional or emergency use only, and for the most part rediscover cash
money, paper and coin. Go back to this simpler form of exchange
wherever possible. We all feel nostalgia isn't what it used to be, but
this step alone will go far toward masking your paper trail.
2. Set up a Trust. This is like turning the porch light on, with nobody
home. It somewhat confuses the paper trail by disrupting the con man's
view, due to the linkage between you and your Trust. Like the service
station attendant washing your windshield with a soapy brush, this will
partly obscure the vision of the con man trying to put together a
financial profile on you.
3. Refuse to star in the con artist's psychodrama. Go offshore. Not
physically. Just export some of your assets This is not considered
socially acceptable. Not patriotic, either. But, it's not illegal, and
it is most effective. If you make yourself invisible to the
bureaucrats--and the scam artists--they will have no address with which
to find you. (A page torn from a legal thriller?)
4. You ask, what if the Hokey Pokey is really what it's all about?
Incredibly, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that bank records enjoy no
privacy protection. That's right, none. They are considered property of
the bank, You are not, however required to reveal your social security
number when opening a non-interest bearing account, e.g. checking,
debit, credit card. So, don't. You are only required to reveal your
social security number to a bank when interest-bearing accounts are
involved. This is because the bank must report to I.R.S., for tax
purposes, on how much they paid you.
5. You can even out-con the con man. Follow the New Hampshire state
motto: "Go away and leave us alone." Get yourself a post office box,
then write, "Moved, left no forwarding address" on the face of every
envelope that the postman tries to deliver to your home. That would
certainly leave anyone trying to steal your identity hanging by a
quickly-shrinking thread. This would be like giving a seeing-eye sled
dog to a blind Eskimo..
These are just a few of the steps you can take to shore up your
privacy. These steps will not totally obliterate the scam artist's view
of your financial structure. But, it will hinder it to the point of
nearly crippling him, leave him babbling to himself, wondering how to
write zero in Roman numerals. Consultation with an expert attorney
would undoubtedly reveal more avenues of privacy restoration.
If such preventive steps were universally adopted, it would be quite a
blow to the scamsters. It would leave con men everywhere quaking in
their Hummer SUVs and calling their analysts on their cell phones.
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About The Author The Con Man's Blog, and first
two chapters of Jack Payne's legal thriller book, Six Hours Past
Thursday, are now available online. Both readable for free. You are
invited. http://www.sixhrs.com
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