Boston Herald

Equifax breach already taking heavy toll on consumers

- THE NATION’S HOUSING Kenneth R. Harney

The scenario that personal finance and credit experts feared most about the heist of consumer data from Equifax may already be underway: Criminals are using the stolen informatio­n to apply for mortgages, credit cards, student loans, tapping into bank debit accounts, filing insurance claims and racking up substantia­l debts, according to a major new class-action suit.

The suit pulls together dozens of individual complaints from consumers in all 50 states plus the District of Columbia and suggests that cybercrimi­nals aren’t wasting time using the Social Security numbers, credit card accounts, driver’s license numbers and other sensitive personal informatio­n they siphoned out of the credit bureau’s reputedly secure databases on 145.5 million Americans.

Filed in federal district court in Equifax’s home territory of Atlanta, the suit is intended to create a single, giant national class action against the company. It alleges violations of federal and state laws and cites claims by more than 50 individual plaintiffs whose informatio­n was hacked that significan­t financial damage already is occurring.

The suit, Allen et al v. Equifax, charges that the company “failed spectacula­rly” in its legal responsibi­lities to protect consumers’ confidenti­al data. It also alleges that the company failed to take steps to upgrade its security protocols, including installing a remedial “patch” provided by a software maker, and then delayed informing consumers about the breach, thereby preventing them from taking steps to minimize the damage.

Through Equifax’s negligence, according to the suit, cybercrimi­nals gained access to data that now “permits thieves to create fake identities, fraudulent­ly obtain loans, swipe tax refunds and destroy” consumers’ creditwort­hiness. Among the most vulnerable potential and actual victims: Homebuyers and mortgage applicants who “tend to have significan­t informatio­n on file with credit bureaus,” and as a result are “especially at risk” for ID theft after the Equifax data breach.

A spokesman for Equifax had no comment on the litigation. Attorneys representi­ng the 50-plus individual plaintiffs in the suit also declined to comment. The potential size of the class represente­d by the suit is enormous — “all residents of the United States whose personal informatio­n was compromise­d as a result of the data breach announced by Equifax.” The allegation­s include violations of the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act, the FTC Act, plus state consumer protection laws, deceptive practices and data breach rules, all of which are recounted in the 323-page filing, state by state.

The suit is particular­ly harsh in its criticism of Equifax’s alleged failures to heed red flags indicating that its systems were not secure. In April 2017, according to the suit, cyber-risk analysis firm Cyence rated the probabilit­y of a security breach at Equifax at 50 percent in the next 12 months. Credit analytics firm FICO gave Equifax low marks on data protection — an enterprise security score around 550 on a scale of 300 to 850. In 2014, Equifax “left private encryption keys on its server,” potentiall­y allowing hackers to decrypt sensitive data, according to the suit.

How might this giant class-action suit affect you? If you own a home, have a mortgage or received informatio­n from Equifax that your files were accessed, you are likely part of the class. You needn’t do anything to join. Keep in mind though: The case may sound like a slam dunk, but it might not be. Lawyers will need to demonstrat­e a link between plaintiffs’ claims of identity theft and the Equifax breach itself, which may be challengin­g to prove.

In the meantime, remember that it’s not too late for you to get defensive. If you’re like the vast majority of consumers who have not yet placed freezes on their files at Equifax, Experian, TransUnion and Innovis, consider doing so now.

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