Thursday, May 31, 2007

How about a Blue Star and Gold Star Alert ?!?

Look.... These are the days that journailists have been trained for. War. It brings the kind of news that times of peace ignore.

While our justice system is slow, it can and does work. It takes time, but eventually legislation will catch up to the world we live in. Who would have thought we'd need legislation on protestors and funerals? Eventually the American public gets a gut full and things get done.

It was through tragedy that the Amber Alert was put in place. It will be through tragedy that the laws catch up to an old crime. Taking advantage of the vulnerable.

It's disgusting and cruel and if I was a journalist, these stories are what I'd be out looking for. These stories address not only the history of our time, they have the power to initiate needed laws. For me it is too late, but it may be just in time for another.

Check out this article sent to me by Flag Gazer.

New Scam Targets Military Spouses
American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, May 31, 2007 - The American Red Cross is warning military spouses about a new identity-theft scam that targets family members of deployed troops.

The Red Cross was alerted of the scam earlier this month, said Devorah Goldburg of the Red Cross.

The scam involves a person with an American accent calling a military spouse, identifying herself as a representative of the Red Cross, and telling the spouse that her husband was hurt in Iraq and was medically evacuated to Germany. The caller then says that doctors can't start treatment until paperwork is completed, and that to start the paperwork they need the spouse to verify her husband's social security number and date of birth.

It is hard to determine how many spouses have been targeted by this scam, Goldburg said, as there are many ways for spouses to report problems like this. However, one confirmed report was enough for the Red Cross to act, she said.

"We know that it happened to one person; it was probably going to happen to others, and we wanted to be prudent and alert people," she said.

American Red Cross representatives typically do not contact military members or dependents directly and almost always go through a commander or first sergeant, according to a Red Cross news release. Military family members are urged not to give out any personal information over the phone if contacted by unknown individuals, including confirmation that their spouse is deployed.

In addition, Red Cross representatives contact military members or dependents directly only in response to an emergency message initiated by a family member, the news release said. The Red Cross does not report any type of casualty information to family members; the Defense Department will contact families directly about family members' injuries.

It is a federal crime, punishable by up to five years in prison, for a person to fraudulently pretend to be a member of, or an agent for, the American Red Cross for the purpose of soliciting, collecting, or receiving money or material, according to the news release. Any military family member that receives such a call is urged to report it to their local family readiness group or military personnel flight.

Thanks for passing this on to us, Flag Gazer.

2 comments:

Semper Fi Mom said...

I sent this on to our LMP Yahoo group. I just can't imagine how anyone would be low enough to prey on a military family like this.

De'on Miller said...

In a way, it is terrifying. People who do this kind of stuff must have what it takes to do anything for their own benefit. Murder probably holds no realm of disgust for them either!