It happens every year around the holidays. I reminiscence about spectacular shopping trips, epic purchases, and gift-giving wishes come true. All of these things happened on my dime, but they werenāt my doing. About two years ago at Christmas, my identity was stolen and Iām still pissed.Ā

I didnāt learn about it until, apropos enough, the morning of Christmas Eve, when I got a call from Best Buy about a credit card authorization. I had received two such calls about three weeks before but I ignored them thinking they were sales calls. This call was different, however, more insistent, and when I returned the call that morning I was told someone had opened a credit line in my name. Christmas Eve 2014 had more to give though, and by dayās end I had two more calls and three letters in the mailāall alerting me to suspected fraudulent activity.Ā
Iāve come home to my house having been broken into, and thereās a weird, unsettling feeling that is similar to nothing else except having your identity stolen. You feel personally violated seeing your belongings touched and tossed around. And realizing that someone not just used your personal bank account but actually stole your identity feels similarly icky. The only semi-consolidation I found was in the fact that I was targeted by a conniving, street-smart, probably tech-genius, wiz of a criminal, who was able to hack into some system to steal my account data, knowing that I had a perfect credit profile. As the weeks went by, however, I was convinced it was more like Beavis and Butthead had accidentally stumbled upon my Social Security number and photo ID.
At least thatās what I began to imagine as the calls came in during the break between Christmas and New Yearās Eve. I realized that this personāor personsābegan their spree around Thanksgiving, and by Christmas when I found out about it, they were already enjoying whatever they purchased. And thatās the rub, because what they purchased was crap.Ā
In short, someone got hold of my name, address, phone number, Social Security number, and driverās license number. What they did was used that info to create a fake checking account, and use my perfect credit score to open unlimited credit lines at stores like Kohlās, Sears, and other places that didnāt immediately catch on to the fraud.Ā
All in all, I discovered more than $40,000 in fraudulent credit charges or attempted charges. Many places realized something was fishy, but a lot did not.Ā
But through all of it I could never figure out what ticked me off moreāthe fact, that some steely-eyed thief profiled me, and then used their above-average intelligence to steal my identity, or that they were smart enough to pull off such a feat, then wasted that opportunity on crappy tchotchkes, tasteless clothing, and showy car accessories. This person or persons took the time to find out the routing number of their local bank in Stockton, a city to which Iāve never been, create a fake driverās license with my info and their picture (which, ew, creepy), and then attempted to open credit at more than 40 different stores.Ā
I mean, if I was going to become me, with no husband to worry about, and no children hanging on my coattails, Iād flit off to Thailand, or take an African safari. Instead, my identity thief wrote bad checks at the Dollar Tree, opened and maxed out credit lines at Fingerhut and Schwanās, and got expensive rims put on their 1997 piece of crap sedan.
What the heck kind of criminal is that? I thought you were intelligent, daring, a risk taker! Cāmon evil me, why couldnāt you have given me a story in which I couldāve at least lived vicariously? Like, why couldnāt you have taken the time to sip coffee in a Paris cafĆ©? Stop in Switzerland on your way to Macedonia, after a short stop in Greece? I mightāve rooted for you for a while as I contemplated where I might have appeared next: Would the alternate Shelly Cone have made an appearance in Morocco, purchasing an expensive weekend in a lavish room with a spectacular view? Would she have tipped down her oversized sunglasses winked and given the desk clerk a flatteringly large tip for making sure her room was stocked with extra fine whiskey? Or would she have simply given her family an extra special Christmas by taking them to some overpriced amusement park and upgrading to the
VIP experience?Ā
Why did you have to waste my identity on frozen seafood, cubic zirconium, lame kitchen cookware, and clothing lines by actresses holding on to their 16th minute of fame?
If I was brave/stupid/smart/evil enough to steal an identity with stellar credit ratings, I think Iād go grand. Iād buy an exotic pet and hire a shirtless, bun-bedecked hottie to take care of it. Iād get a massage every day. Iād have a chef deliver my meals and a trainer set me up on a fitness planāthat is until the credit ran out. Which it would.Ā
And it did. I couldnāt keep up with fighting off the number of bad checks at Walmart and AutoZone, or the canceled deliveries of frozen stuffed chicken breasts, and eventually I had to put a permanent freeze on my credit with the three major bureaus. After about a year, the thieves were unable to obtain credit in my name. Though even now, I get the occasional letter notifying me that someone attempted to get credit.Ā
So now during this season of thankfulness and giving, I get rejoice that Iāve finally cleared the situation, lament that the thieves turned out to be so lame, and appreciate that I donāt need credit to enjoy buying and doing the things I want to at this time of the year.Ā
Send Editor Shelly Cone letters about what you are thankful for this season at scone@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Nov 24 – Dec 1, 2016.

