Saturday, June 25, 2011

Foster children struggle with identify theft

By Paresh Dave
pdave@sacbee.com
Published: Saturday, Jun. 25, 2011 - 12:00 am | Page 3A
Last Modified: Saturday, Jun. 25, 2011 - 12:13 am

Four years after Sacramento County Child Protective Services removed Katrina Haywood from her mother's abusive grip, the woman still has managed to stand in the way of her daughter entering college, finding a job or paying for the roof over her head.

Haywood, 18, has spent the past two months starting to clean up a mess that foster care workers say she couldn't have prevented.

Eight entities, including Bank of America and Pacific Gas & Electric, want a total of $6,000 from Haywood. She says her birth mother started opening lines of credit using subtly crafted aliases and Haywood's Social Security number. Since the bills weren't paid, the credit history associated with Haywood's Social Security number is filled with accounts in poor standing.

Exiting the state's 60,000-member foster system at about the age of 18 is hard enough for teenagers such as Haywood. For one to five out of every 10 children, the situation is even worse. Their Social Security numbers and birthdays, easily accessible to birth parents, foster parents, siblings, social workers and courts, were hijacked so others could get quick cash from banks, keep electricity and water flowing, avoid criminal conviction or even save on taxes and medical costs.

"You're completely at their whim as children," said Sacramento-area social worker John Morton.

The children graduating from foster care then must reclaim their Social Security number – often with little financial wherewithal. Money woes at the state and federal level also have stalled solutions meant to help foster children reverse identity fraud. FULL STORY

So much for "Best Interest of the Child" and "village raising kids"

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