Have you ever donated old
clothes, books, furniture or other items to a Salvation Army or Goodwill
store? Well, one donator to Goodwill in
central Indiana donated a bit more than he intended. If his donations were checked before being
put up for sale, this may not be an issue.
Unfortunately, a box containing 39 pounds of one family’s personal
information was sold to a woman for $27.69.
Emily Watson opened a box
that she bought from a Goodwill outlet store in the Indianapolis area and found
someone else’s sensitive records. If
items can’t be sold at the retail stores for any reason, they are put in bins
and sent to Goodwill outlet stores.
These are closed boxes sold by the pound to anyone who wants to take a
chance that there is something valuable inside.
Ms. Watson bought one such box and when she opened it found personal
information all belonging to one family.
The box contained Social Security cards, tax returns, pay stubs, banking
information, dental and other medical records, divorce papers and insurance
documents. There were also family photos
and addresses of family members.
This had happened to Ms.
Watson before. At another time, she purchased
a box containing personal information, so she opened the box in the store
before buying it. When she saw what it
contained, she pulled out all the items to show a store employee, who referred
her to the manager. When the manager
looked through the paperwork, she said, “It doesn’t look harmful to me. It’s OK.”
Ms. Watson then made the purchase because she was afraid that it would
get into the hands of someone not as honest as she. She was afraid for the people the information
belonged to.
After purchasing the box,
Ms. Watson tipped off WTHR Channel 13 as to her find. WTHR 13 Investigates then opened an
investigation as to the allegations made of Goodwill selling personal
information. The station sent undercover
“shoppers” to three Indianapolis area Goodwill outlets and found that at every
outlet location they visited, they were able to purchase someone’s personal
information. This didn’t just happen
once; out of 28 visits in 2 months, personal information was purchased 24
times. WTHR employees were able to
purchase valid debit and credit cards, leases, automobile titles, medical
histories, immigration papers, bills, employee drug test results, college
transcripts, IRA and 401K statements and all other kinds of legal documents
containing personal information.
The personal information
donated to Goodwill, then sold by them, contained thousands of pages, filling
three boxes. Some Social Security
numbers found belonged to police officers stationed at the Indianapolis Metro Police
Department. When WTHR spoke with Sgt.
Eric Eads, who is an identity theft expert in the department, he said, “Let me
put it to you this way: this is a police
nightmare here. If someone got ahold of
this stuff. It’s just shocking the
amount of Social Security numbers and tax records you found.”
Another person whose tax
records were found by WTHR employees is Elesabeth Leclercq. She is
quoted as saying, “It’s terrible. I
don’t even know what to say. I’m still
stunned and in a state of shock.” Julie
and Brett Snyder also found out that their information had been sold along with
information on their children. Mrs.
Snyder said, “This isn’t anything we would throw away. I mean, we wouldn’t have just handed this
over to Goodwill. It’s shocking. We are completely shocked.”
The person whose information
started it all when Emily Watson purchased it is named Rose. She refused to give her last name, but she
did give a statement. “It’s pretty
devastating and I’ve had nightmares about it” she said.