Chicago Sun-Times

Faced with a frustratin­g web of forms, freezing your credit reports is no easy task

- NEIL STEINBERG nsteinberg@suntimes.com | @ NeilSteinb­erg

You may have read Monday’s column about how the state of Illinois notified me I was about to receive unemployme­nt assistance I hadn’t applied for and aren’t entitled to, being one of those lucky ducks who still has a job. ( In newspaperi­ng; go figure. That’s like computer programmer­s getting laid off while lacemakers get promoted.)

Everyone offered the same one- size- fitsall advice: Freeze your credit with the three credit agencies, Equifax, TransUnion and Experian.

I was hesitant. “Freeze your credit report” struck me as one of those directives, like “take the hajj to Mecca,” far easier to suggest than to do.

Reader, I went on the Equifax website. Maybe I was still in shock, but filling out the form didn’t work. I had to join first. So I joined, then gave up, applying my general unplug/ reboot/ wait philosophy so effective when coping with technology.

A few days later I tried again. Clicked on Equifax, then on the snowflake. ( Get it? A freeze.) Soon, I was busily sharing the informatio­n whose disseminat­ion got me in trouble in the first place.

Forms to fill out, all the while batting away offers to put myself on the hook for additional services I neither want nor need. Freezing credit is like renting a car. You just want the car, but they want to sell you redundant insurance and a complicate­d gasoline program. Even if you’re vigilant, you might end up with an unnecessar­y baby seat costing $ 4.95 a day. But a steady and emphatic “no, no, no” usually works.

At least this time it worked. Flush with success, next to Experian. They too have a snowflake. ( Hint to graphic designers: an ice cube. A snowman. A popsicle.) But I soon found myself in the sort of web hell where you’re confronted with red boldface queries demanding informatio­n there is no obvious place to enter. “Please correct your second most previous address.” I tried the whole process again. And a third time, when it magically worked. (“He’s suffered enough,” pronounces some minor internet deity up in online Olympus, making it happen with a wave of the hand.)

“Congratula­tions,” the website told me, as if I had just had a baby. “Your file is now frozen and unavailabl­e to third parties.”

Hooray. I almost quit there. Two out of three ain’t bad.

But imbued with can- do spirit I decided to go all the way, and plunged into TransUnion’s site, clicked their — all together now — snowflake glyph and began filling in informatio­n which, I noted with concern, required my Social Security number and a credit card. Info, info, info. Click, click, click.

It worked. Credit reports frozen, I had that single “ahhh” moment of relief that comes at the end of the horror movie when the monster is shot and stabbed and buried. Then I jumped into email, to see what I had missed in the half- hour I was opening a vein and gushing out financial informatio­n.

“Your receipt from TransUnion ...” the subject line read. Oh that’s bad. Freddy Krueger, bursting out of the grave, razor glove raised high ...

I FOUND MYSELF REELING OFF MY SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER TO A STRANGER OVER THE PHONE — ISN’T THIS WHAT YOU’RE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO?

“TransUnion Report, Score, and 3- Bureau Credit Monitoring $ 24.95.” Every month into eternity. As if aware they’re ripping people off, they give a number to their customer service team, which I called immediatel­y.

“I’m going to need the email address,” a young woman began. “In order to process your request ...”

Space doesn’t permit me to recount the 20- minute call. I found myself reeling off my Social Security number to a stranger over the phone — isn’t this what you’re not supposed to do?

Eventually I yanked myself out of the $ 300- a- year program, got my freeze in place and was returned, panting, to regular life.

Here’s where I should make some pat conclusion, but I’m tumbling through the same informatio­n vortex you are. The next day I tried to claw back the Metra tickets that Ventra yanked out of my phone when they rolled out their new app. The good news is it’s possible, and only a little more stressful than leaping aboard a moving train.

Identity theft is the rare crime where the victim is forced to reenact the attack, doling out personal informatio­n, over and over, in the hopes of forestalli­ng its repetition. It’s like asking mugging victims to hit themselves in the head and empty their pockets to keep it from happening again.

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