"Kansas Identity Theft Spike Could Be Linked to Data Breach"

A Department of Labor data breach may have impacted the state with the highest identity theft rate in the country.  According to new data released by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the reported rate of identity theft in Kansas in 2020 was higher than that of any other state and more than three times greater than the national average. Last year, 43,211 Kansans informed the FTC that someone had stolen or attempted to steal their identity, a year-on-year increase of 1,802%.  Kansas lawmakers are investigating the possibility of a connection between the surge in identity theft and an alleged data breach at the Kansas Department of Labor (KDOL).   An investigation into a possible breach was launched after a woman accidentally entered the wrong Social Security number into the KDOL website in February and was shown someone else's personal information.   A February report from the Kansas Legislative Post Audit Division stated that just under a quarter ($600m) of the roughly $2.6bn Kansas paid in state and federal unemployment benefits in 2020 could have been fraudulent.

 

Infosecurity reports: "Kansas Identity Theft Spike Could Be Linked to Data Breach"

 

Submitted by Anonymous on