bc

Calgary man warns others after attempted mail and credit card fraud

Victim came home to stack of mail including two mail-forwarding notices

Pamela Fieber · CBC News · Posted: Nov 14, 2019 4:58 PM MT | Last Updated: an hour ago

A city resident returned from vacation to find two mail forwarding confirmations from Canada Post that he didn't order. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)

A city resident returned from vacation to find two mail forwarding confirmations from Canada Post that he didn't order. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)

A Calgary man is warning others about a fraud that involves forwarded mail after he narrowly avoided being a victim of identity theft.

The man, who was on a three-week vacation in Europe, returned to a stack of mail that revealed an attempt to forward his mail to an undisclosed address.

"I found two mail forwarding confirmations from Canada Post, one in my name and one in the name of a party I didn't recognize, it was a foreign name," Brian told the Calgary Eyeopener. 

CBC has agreed to use only Brian's first name.

"So I obviously was suspicious. And I phoned Canada Post and I cancelled it. And I was fortunate because I got home two days before the mail forwarding was supposed to take effect." 

Brian said Canada Post would not tell him who had attempted to redirect his mail.

"Canada Post wouldn't tell me that," he said. "Only after I asked repeatedly, they told me it was an address in B.C., but they wouldn't give me that information."

Canada Post advised Brian to contact credit agencies Equifax and TransUnion, which he says he did.

"About a week later, I started getting credit cards in the mail, one in my name and another in the name of the individual, the other individual that was having the mail forwarded from my address," he said. "And when I phoned Visa, I found out that somebody had successfully ordered secondary cards on my credit card. So there were additional credit cards being issued by Visa through a bank in my name and this other name. 

Brian immediately called his credit card company, Visa.

"They wouldn't tell me much, either. It was only through my personal due diligence that I found out that it's pretty easy to get another credit card on your account. What you need is your name, your address, your date of birth, and you need a password."

Brian wants to warn others against a very common password practice.

"My verbal password was the one they asked me for when I originally opened up telephone banking, which was maybe 10 years ago. And it was my mother's maiden name, which was what the banks ask for," he said. "Doing some research, we found that a mother's maiden name is a tradable commodity on the dark web."

Brian says your mother's maiden name is an easily compromised password.

He is relieved to have avoided being a victim but alarmed at how easily it could have happened.

"So if you think about it, you go to a hotel. You give them your passport. You give them your credit card. And then you fill out this form with your address. So I'm just speculating here, but I'm guessing it was an inside job at a hotel where they had all of my critical information," he said. "And they knew we were away."

Had Brian not returned home a couple of days before the mail forwarding was to start, all his mail would have begun to be forwarded — including the credit cards that were ordered by phone through Visa.

"So they would have had my credit cards both in my name and in their name," he says.

CBC contacted Canada Post to ask about this mail forwarding fraud.

An email response from Canada Post's media relations department indicates the agency has many checks and balances.

"For all in-person or online Mail Forwarding requests made, Canada Post follows a multi-pronged identity verification process … To avoid undermining our security approach, we don't publicly discuss the specific measures we take."

The email goes on to say that Canada Post works closely with with the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, banks and police, and that issues related to fraud go far beyond Canada Post. 

"For example, someone who successfully manages to reroute someone's mail to an address has likely fraudulently obtained and used personal information, for an item such as a credit card, prior to the Canada Post Mail Forwarding request being made."

Bottom line, if you've received notification of an address change from Canada Post that you did not request, make contact immediately. From there, the case will go to the Canada Post fraud centre, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre and credit bureaus to double check credit reports.

Brain, who narrowly avoided being a victim, is not ready to leave it to the system.

"Obviously, this is something that someone was able to do without too much effort," Brain said. "Quite honestly, when I phoned Canada Post, I got, I think, three or four calls from different departments, you know, from the DPL and from head office and from the fraud department. And the left hand didn't really know what the right hand was doing. I certainly didn't have a lot of confidence after talking to Canada Post that they're on the case around security."

Brian thinks it's worth a warning.

"This was easily done. All they need is a driver's licence, from what I can tell, in order to forward someone's mail," he said. "And if you have somebody's vital information, it's pretty easy to get a fake driver's licence."

CBC contacted the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre for more information on this type of mail fraud. 

"Currently the data we collect in relation to ID Fraud involving mail forwarding is incomplete and difficult to collate," a representative wrote in an email. 

An attached summary report indicates that agency received 9,434 complaints of ID theft and 8,836 reports of ID fraud from Canadians in 2018. That's similar to 2017, when the agency received 9,660 and 8,737 reports, respectively. Numbers for 2019 are still being collected, but the report notes that overall, the agency estimates these numbers represent "less than five per cent of the total number of actual victims."

The agency website reminds Canadians not to give out sensitive banking or identity information, including driver's licence number, social insurance number over the phone or the internet, and advises getting a free credit report once a year from Equifax or TransUnion.

More information is available at antifraudcentre.ca or by calling the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre at 1-888-495-8501.

What you need to know to survive the haze from B.C. wildfires

By and Aaron McArthur Global News

With wildfires raging across British Columbia, a thick blanket of smoke has covered much of the province along with neighbouring Alberta, Saskatchewan and even parts of Manitoba.

Environment Canada has issued dozens of air quality advisories for the four provinces, and in the B.C. communities of Williams Lake, Quesnel and Castlegar, the air quality health index has reached 10, or “very high risk.

aq-advisories.png

In many communities, residents have taken to wearing face masks, and the haze has been thick enough to blot the sun out hours before sunset.

In Prince George, B.C., ash has been falling like snow, while Calgary and Edmonton have been enveloped in an eerie orange haze.

“It’s been difficult, to say the least. Even sleeping at night is trouble, even with the windows closed and with the air on,” said Lorna Burns, a Kamloops delivery driver who suffers from mild chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

“It’s tricky, but the job’s got to be done.”

Health experts are advising people to avoid strenuous exercise and stay indoors as much as possible. If you’re able to invest in a HEPA air filter to clean the air indoors, all the better.

“Take frequent breaks, try to get inside, if you’re on a break, into an area where the air isn’t quite as contaminated,” said Dr. Todd Ring with the Royal Inland Hospital.


 

For those who have no choice but to work or travel outdoors, a respirator with an N-95 rating can be effective. Homemade solutions are less reliable.

“Wearing a cloth mask or bandanna or something like that, it offers a slight bit of protection. But really, it’s not very effective,” air quality expert Michael Brauer told Global News.

Cloth surgical masks can actually make things worse, he said, because they provide the illusion of protection but actually just make it harder to breathe.

At London Drugs, pharmacies across the regional chain are reporting a sharp uptick in complaints linked to air quality and are scrambling to fill inhaler prescriptions.

Pharmacy general manager Chris Chiew said it’s important for people to know their limitations.

“Younger children, the elderly or anyone who is asthmatic definitely has to be careful to make sure they have their inhalers close by,” he said.

“Actually, stay away from anywhere where there is a high amount of smoke, so if it is outside, make sure they stay indoors as much as they can,” Chiew added.

According to Environment Canada, people with respiratory illnesses and heart disease are particularly susceptible to air pollution.

People with diabetes are also at risk, as are young children, pregnant women, seniors and anyone with a chronic illness.

The agency says that under hazardous air quality conditions, susceptible people can also reduce risk by taking the following steps:

  • Reduce or reschedule outdoor physical activities
  • Monitor possible symptoms, such as difficulty breathing, coughing or irritated eyes
  • Follow a doctor’s advice to manage existing conditions such as heart or lung disease