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Soon after Amy Gray, a 47-year-old public school teacher in Akron, Ohio, had her purse stolen last January from her workplace — an employment skills program for students housed at a mall —
she received a bank alert that someone was using her credit and debit cards. She quickly canceled the cards and ordered replacements. She also ordered a new driver’s license and received a
duplicate of the one that had been stolen. It included the same ID number. Though it didn’t worry her at the time, Gray recalls, “that turned out to be the worst problem.” She discovered
this a few months later, when she received a letter from Ohio’s Bureau of Motor Vehicles informing her that her license had been suspended, due to an outstanding arrest warrant in her name.
The police later told her that a shoplifter they had caught at a local store had shown them Gray’s license as identification. Even though the person didn’t really look like Gray in the
picture, she says, “they gave my license back to that person and let them go on their merry way.” Because the police didn’t believe her, Gray was forced to contest the charges in court.
Luckily, her attorney was able to get them dismissed thanks to a store surveillance video showing that the thief was older and had a different build and hairstyle than Gray. It cost her
$2,500 in legal fees to clear her name. WHY CRIMINALS LOVE DRIVER’S LICENSES It’s a predicament that too many Americans have to face. For most of us, a driver’s license is the go-to form of
identification, the proof that we’re asked to present when we cash checks or show up at an airport to board a flight. “Just think about everything that you do, using your driver’s license to
prove that you are you,” says Eva Velasquez, president and CEO of the Identity Theft Resource Center, a nonprofit organization that works to combat crimes and assist victims. But, with your
license, “a thief can do it as well.” VIDEO: Signs It's Not the DMV Contacting You And having your picture on the license can provide surprisingly scant protection, she adds, “if the
person who wants to use it even remotely resembles you.” Some scammers steal people’s actual licenses, while others convince their targets to upload scanned copies of their card to the
internet as part of an application for a fake government loan or grant. In what’s become a disturbing trend, still others hack into the computer systems of government motor vehicle agencies
and businesses that use licenses to identify customers, and steal the data.