Unemployment Benefits Fraud and Identity Theft
Washington state has identified an abnormally high rate of fraudulent
unemployment claims. As an employer of the state, we are providing the
following information and resources for staff to protect your personal
information, should you feel it necessary to do so. If the district
receives a report (as an employer) we will contact the employee
immediately. However, some reports we have received are from employees
who received a letter in the mail from the Employment Security
Department alerting them they have applied for self-employment benefits.
The following recommendations have been released by the Seattle Police
Department cyber-crime investigators. These steps are recommended for
anyone who knows, or believes, they are a victim of unemployment fraud.
Step One - Create a file and keep your notes, contacts and other information.
Step Two - Contact Payroll by emailing Tracey Lee at [email protected]
Step Three - Contact Washington State Employment Security Department (ESD) in one of the following ways.
Step Four - Consider filing a police report - online or non-emergency
report with the agency whose jurisdiction you live in. They will
provide you with a case number for your report. Keep this in your files.
Step Five - You can also report any potential identity theft to the federal government with the Federal Trade Commission here: https://www.identitytheft.gov/
Step Six - Obtain your free credit reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion at Annual Credit Report or
by calling 1-877-322-8228. Report to the credit bureaus that the
fraudulent claim was made using your identity and provide them with the
case number from your police report. You can have a fraud alert put on
your identity.
- A fraud alert is free and will make it harder for someone to open
new accounts in your name. To place a fraud alert, contact one of the
three credit bureaus. That bureau must tell the other two credit
bureaus.
Experian: 1-888-397-3742
TransUnion: 1-800-680-7289
Equifax: 1-888-766-0008
Frequently Asked Questions
Is
there anything I can do proactively to see if someone is attempting to
apply for unemployment benefits using my social security number?
A way to prevent future claims for those who are not yet victims is to create a personal Secure Access Washington (SAW) account and connect it to the Employment Security Department. SAW is
a portal to access several different types of state resources, one of
which being Employment Security (ESD). If you have enrolled in SEBB benefits or applied for your
driver's license online, you created and used a SAW account. This can
be used to check previous quarterly wages as well as file for
unemployment compensation.
SAW Account Instructions
Someone told me I should freeze my credit. What does that mean?
If
you do not have upcoming large purchases, such as a home, you may
consider a freeze to your credit for additional protection. Learn more
at the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's website here: https://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0497-credit-freeze-faqs