
LSEG child ID theft documentary takes centre stage with international film festival selection
One In Fifty, a short documentary film from LSEG Risk Intelligence on child identity theft has today been officially selected for the Indy Shorts International Film Festival 2025, marking the film's World Premiere.
The documentary is one part of a campaign which includes a data-rich white paper on child identity theft, It Takes an Industry. Together, these weave B2B focussed financial crime insights with powerful, cinematic, corporate storytelling. The trailer is available on YouTube.
The documentary, directed by Haley Watson, involved marketing and research teams from LSEG alongside the production and technical capabilities of production house, Indigo Slate.
The 15-minute film follows Renata Galvão, an LSEG employee whose identity was stolen at the age of six in Brazil. Her stolen identity was used to create companies, and when those businesses collapsed, young Renata – listed as the legal owner on paper – was left with over USD $400,000 in alleged debt.
Indy Shorts is one of the world's leading dedicated to short-form storytelling and is an Academy Award, BAFTA and Goya-qualifying festival. It will host the premiere on Thursday 24 July 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA with the documentary available globally via YouTube thereafter.
Renata Galvão, Channel Partner Manager at LSEG Risk Intelligence and subject of the documentary, comments: 'I was only six years old when my identity was stolen and for years, unknown to me, I was already labelled as a fraudster. Sharing my story in this documentary is my way of ensuring no one has to go through what I did.
David White, Global Head of Product & Data, LSEG Risk Intelligence, comments: 'We wanted to cut through the typical product positioning and bring audiences, unfamiliar and familiar with LSEG, closer to the human impact of financial crime and the power of data for good.
'It's very rare for a corporate to be selected for a film festival and validates the team's creativity and vision in bringing this to life as well as Renata's bravery in opening up.'
'Short films harness a special power to deliver powerful messages in impactful and creative ways,' said Heartland Film Artistic Director Greg Sorvig. 'Haley Watson's 'One in Fifty' is one of those stories we're thrilled to premiere at Indy Shorts, a short film that empathetically and intimately exposes a major issue impacting vulnerable communities – in this case financial crime and childhood identity theft – and reveals a hopeful light in what first felt like infinite darkness.'
It takes an industry
The white paper calls out the impact of child identity theft, the risks to financial institutions, and highlights the growing threat of synthetic identity fraud. It outlines practical actions financial institutions may adopt immediately such as identity, age and third-party verification together with transaction monitoring for child-linked accounts and multi-layered security.
Key stats from the campaign:
1 in 50 children in the U.S. were victims of identity theft in a single year (Javelin, 2025).
73 % of child-ID-theft cases involve a perpetrator known to the victim.
Synthetic-identity fraud cost U.S. lenders an estimated $6 billion in losses, with children's credentials a primary target (U.S. Federal Reserve).
Watch the trailer for Renata's story on Youtube
Download the full report.
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One In Fifty, a short documentary film from LSEG Risk Intelligence on child identity theft has today been officially selected for the Indy Shorts International Film Festival 2025, marking the film's World Premiere. The documentary is one part of a campaign which includes a data-rich white paper on child identity theft, It Takes an Industry. Together, these weave B2B focussed financial crime insights with powerful, cinematic, corporate storytelling. The trailer is available on YouTube. The documentary, directed by Haley Watson, involved marketing and research teams from LSEG alongside the production and technical capabilities of production house, Indigo Slate. The 15-minute film follows Renata Galvão, an LSEG employee whose identity was stolen at the age of six in Brazil. Her stolen identity was used to create companies, and when those businesses collapsed, young Renata – listed as the legal owner on paper – was left with over USD $400,000 in alleged debt. Indy Shorts is one of the world's leading dedicated to short-form storytelling and is an Academy Award, BAFTA and Goya-qualifying festival. It will host the premiere on Thursday 24 July 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA with the documentary available globally via YouTube thereafter. Renata Galvão, Channel Partner Manager at LSEG Risk Intelligence and subject of the documentary, comments: 'I was only six years old when my identity was stolen and for years, unknown to me, I was already labelled as a fraudster. Sharing my story in this documentary is my way of ensuring no one has to go through what I did. David White, Global Head of Product & Data, LSEG Risk Intelligence, comments: 'We wanted to cut through the typical product positioning and bring audiences, unfamiliar and familiar with LSEG, closer to the human impact of financial crime and the power of data for good. 'It's very rare for a corporate to be selected for a film festival and validates the team's creativity and vision in bringing this to life as well as Renata's bravery in opening up.' 'Short films harness a special power to deliver powerful messages in impactful and creative ways,' said Heartland Film Artistic Director Greg Sorvig. 'Haley Watson's 'One in Fifty' is one of those stories we're thrilled to premiere at Indy Shorts, a short film that empathetically and intimately exposes a major issue impacting vulnerable communities – in this case financial crime and childhood identity theft – and reveals a hopeful light in what first felt like infinite darkness.' It takes an industry The white paper calls out the impact of child identity theft, the risks to financial institutions, and highlights the growing threat of synthetic identity fraud. It outlines practical actions financial institutions may adopt immediately such as identity, age and third-party verification together with transaction monitoring for child-linked accounts and multi-layered security. Key stats from the campaign: 1 in 50 children in the U.S. were victims of identity theft in a single year (Javelin, 2025). 73 % of child-ID-theft cases involve a perpetrator known to the victim. Synthetic-identity fraud cost U.S. lenders an estimated $6 billion in losses, with children's credentials a primary target (U.S. Federal Reserve). Watch the trailer for Renata's story on Youtube Download the full report.


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