
‘I owed £300,000 in debts after my identity was stolen age 6'
A quarter of children will have their identities stolen before the turn 18, according to new research
Renata Galvão faced the daunting task of paying off $400,000 (£295,000) in debts that weren't hers throughout her early adulthood after her identity was stolen at the tender age of six. A relative had convinced her mother to authorise this fraudulent use at the time.
"I do not blame her for a second, she was coerced and told information that was not true. I'm choosing to speak up now, so no one else has to go through what I did," she remarked as part of LSEG Risk Intelligence's 'One in Fifty' documentary film.
Renata's predicament shows a growing pattern with fraudsters exploiting children's clear financial history, causing havoc that can go unnoticed for many years. She continued: "I was only six years old when my identity was stolen and for years, I had no idea. By the time I started work, it was already too late."
In Renata's case, her identity was used to establish businesses which later failed, leaving her as the unwitting 'legal owner' saddled with the debt. She recounted visits from debt collectors during her childhood, who were astonished to learn their supposed debtor was merely a child.
Accumulating over $400,000 (£295,000) in debts that weren't hers still annihilated Renata's credit score and wreaked financial ruin. The full magnitude of her ordeal, however, was only uncovered when she reached 18.
She said: "When I turned 18, was working, opened a bank account and bought a car, everything that happened during my childhood came crashing down on me all of a sudden. I now had a financial life, and those things could be taken away from me. They froze my assets and took my savings to pay off the debts."
For many young victims, pursuing legal action against the perpetrator is the only recourse for clearing their names. But that wasn't an option for Renata because her mother, despite also being a victim, could have faced charges due to her involvement. Renata, alongside her mother, spent ten years repaying the debt until she was 28 instead.
Alarmingly, an LSEG Risk Intelligence report indicates that child identity theft is an escalating problem, not an isolated case like Renata's. Identity theft has increased by 13% since last March, with the US Federal Trade Commission revealing a 40% surge between 2021 and 2024.
To shed light on this disturbing trend, Renata shares her story in the newly released documentary One in Fifty. The film aims to raise awareness among consumers and financial organisations of the severity and prevalence of child identity theft in the US.
Now a risk and compliance professional at LSEG, Renata commented: "Globally, there are entire systems in place to protect children from physical or sexual abuse from a family member. But no such system exists for protecting children from financial abuse. No one should have a say in my financial life other than myself."
David White, Global Head of Product & Data, LSEG Risk Intelligence, cautioned: "Since Renata's ordeal over twenty years ago, fraudsters have become more sophisticated, using AI and social engineering to target the most vulnerable.
"Children are being targeted because they know our systems weren't designed to spot them. This has to change. No one organisation can fix this alone - it's going to take the entire industry working together to protect the most vulnerable among us."
LSEG Risk Intelligence is calling on financial institutions to adopt new safeguards to shield customers from the severe consequences of identity theft and fraud, as outlined in their latest report. The recommendations include introducing checks to confirm a person's age and identity, along with multi-factor authentication for individuals lacking a credit history.
The report also notes that 25% of children will have their identity stolen, at an average age of just eight, and 73% of victims know the perpetrator. The majority of these victims face financial fraud being lodged against them, but a small percentage are also left with a criminal record for offences they didn't commit.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
4 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
‘I owed £300,000 in debts after my identity was stolen age 6'
A quarter of children will have their identities stolen before the turn 18, according to new research Renata Galvão faced the daunting task of paying off $400,000 (£295,000) in debts that weren't hers throughout her early adulthood after her identity was stolen at the tender age of six. A relative had convinced her mother to authorise this fraudulent use at the time. "I do not blame her for a second, she was coerced and told information that was not true. I'm choosing to speak up now, so no one else has to go through what I did," she remarked as part of LSEG Risk Intelligence's 'One in Fifty' documentary film. Renata's predicament shows a growing pattern with fraudsters exploiting children's clear financial history, causing havoc that can go unnoticed for many years. She continued: "I was only six years old when my identity was stolen and for years, I had no idea. By the time I started work, it was already too late." In Renata's case, her identity was used to establish businesses which later failed, leaving her as the unwitting 'legal owner' saddled with the debt. She recounted visits from debt collectors during her childhood, who were astonished to learn their supposed debtor was merely a child. Accumulating over $400,000 (£295,000) in debts that weren't hers still annihilated Renata's credit score and wreaked financial ruin. The full magnitude of her ordeal, however, was only uncovered when she reached 18. She said: "When I turned 18, was working, opened a bank account and bought a car, everything that happened during my childhood came crashing down on me all of a sudden. I now had a financial life, and those things could be taken away from me. They froze my assets and took my savings to pay off the debts." For many young victims, pursuing legal action against the perpetrator is the only recourse for clearing their names. But that wasn't an option for Renata because her mother, despite also being a victim, could have faced charges due to her involvement. Renata, alongside her mother, spent ten years repaying the debt until she was 28 instead. Alarmingly, an LSEG Risk Intelligence report indicates that child identity theft is an escalating problem, not an isolated case like Renata's. Identity theft has increased by 13% since last March, with the US Federal Trade Commission revealing a 40% surge between 2021 and 2024. To shed light on this disturbing trend, Renata shares her story in the newly released documentary One in Fifty. The film aims to raise awareness among consumers and financial organisations of the severity and prevalence of child identity theft in the US. Now a risk and compliance professional at LSEG, Renata commented: "Globally, there are entire systems in place to protect children from physical or sexual abuse from a family member. But no such system exists for protecting children from financial abuse. No one should have a say in my financial life other than myself." David White, Global Head of Product & Data, LSEG Risk Intelligence, cautioned: "Since Renata's ordeal over twenty years ago, fraudsters have become more sophisticated, using AI and social engineering to target the most vulnerable. "Children are being targeted because they know our systems weren't designed to spot them. This has to change. No one organisation can fix this alone - it's going to take the entire industry working together to protect the most vulnerable among us." LSEG Risk Intelligence is calling on financial institutions to adopt new safeguards to shield customers from the severe consequences of identity theft and fraud, as outlined in their latest report. The recommendations include introducing checks to confirm a person's age and identity, along with multi-factor authentication for individuals lacking a credit history. The report also notes that 25% of children will have their identity stolen, at an average age of just eight, and 73% of victims know the perpetrator. The majority of these victims face financial fraud being lodged against them, but a small percentage are also left with a criminal record for offences they didn't commit.


Reuters
2 days ago
- Reuters
U.S. money market fund inflows surge on caution over tariffs
June 6 (Reuters) - U.S. money market funds witnessed huge inflows in the week ended June 4 as investor caution over a rise in U.S. tariffs on steel imports, uncertainties over President Donald Trump's trade disputes with China and a crucial employment report on Friday, boosted demand for safer investment avenues. According to LSEG Lipper data, U.S. investors bought a net $66.24 billion worth of money market funds during the week, registering their largest weekly net purchase since December 4, 2024. At the same time, riskier equity funds faced a net $7.42 billion worth of weekly outflows, sharply higher than approximately $5.39 billion worth of net disposals in the prior week. The small-cap segment witnessed a net $2.99 billion worth of drawdowns, the highest for a week since April 30. Outflows from multi-cap, mid-cap and large-cap funds stood at $2.13 billion, $1.05 billion and $962 million, respectively. Sectoral funds, meanwhile, experienced a minor $136 million worth of inflows with investors adding a net $1.15 billion into tech, and $309 million into consumer staples, while withdrawing nearly $1.16 billion from financials. Weekly net inflows into U.S. bond funds, meanwhile, cooled to a four-week low of $4.8 billion during the week. Despite the weaker demand in the broader segment, the short-to-intermediate investment-grade funds turned popular, grossing a net $3.98 billion- the highest since November 2024- worth of inflows during the week. Inflation-protected funds and general domestic taxable fixed income funds also attracted a significant $634 million and $505 million, worth of inflows.


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Square Mile needs a reboot - and cutting back on tax and regulation could work wonders: ALEX BRUMMER
Almost a decade has passed since the Brexit referendum and London's status as Europe's financial hub is unshaken. The institutions which started out in the alleys and coffee shops of the City, such as the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG), Lloyd's of London and the London Metal Exchange may have switched focus but remain largely intact. The LSEG may have lost allure as a base for share trading, listings and initial public offerings but as a data and derivatives clearing powerhouse it has few rivals. The Square Mile has a history of remaking itself. The old-line merchant banks Warburg, Schroder Wagg, Flemings and Morgan Grenfell may have been absorbed by big overseas players. But it is no accident that the dominant American 'bulge bracket' banks, Goldman Sachs, Citi and JP Morgan Chase dominate the City and Canary Wharf skylines. One of the great hopes post-Brexit was that the combination of British tech and AI skills, forged in the intellectual furnace of our great research universities, together with the depth of trading and financial skills in the Square Mile, would see the UK give birth to a generation of fintech firms. The list of success stories is considerable: Worldpay, Monzo, Revolut, Atom Bank and payments firm Wise. Keeping them in London is proving difficult. Revolut, which has ambition to list with a valuation of up to $50billion (£36.8billion), has its eyes on New York. Wise spotted a gap in the UK market with money transfers. It exploited high charges and cumbersome systems used by the retail banks, together with big margins on exchange rate translations, to create a cheaper and easier-to-use platform. Now it has decided to up sticks and shift its share quote to New York. The visibility for fast-growing tech companies in the US is tempting. Despite Donald Trump's best efforts, there is a huge immigrant population who might prefer using Wise tech to cumbersome Western Union money transfers. One suspects the real reasons are more personal. Wise's founders have been given a torrid time by regulators and tax inspectors, and Trump's US offers more of the Wild West and a crypto universe. The odds on being snapped up by a financial or tech giant, in the manner of Worldpay, will also improve. The promise of better valuations in the US is a chimera. The think-tank New Financial has found that of 130 European firms that moved across the Atlantic, including 51 British ones, 70pc trade below previous valuations. The higher market capitalisations on American exchanges provide a false narrative. Indexes and funds have been inflated by fast-growing high tech. As a result, emigres, such as plumbing group Ferguson and betting group Flutter, have not prospered as much as they might have hoped. It is the executives, free from British salary and bonus envy, and governance rules, who have the freedom to become richer. So, what can London do to revive equity markets and make sure ever more listings don't choose New York or Amsterdam? The tax system could be made more favourable by abolishing stamp duty on share trades. Rules on regulatory capital could be eased so that pension funds, life insurers and banks feel more comfortable buying shares and providing leverage to traders. UK citizens enjoying the tax break on dividends and capital gains in ISAs, should be required to invest all or part of their money in London-listed firms, or forfeit tax advantage. Regulatory red tape and intrusive governance rules should be relaxed. Over-zealous regulation did not prevent failures such as construction group Carillion, Patisserie Valerie, Thames Water et al. The loss of Wise will be seen as confirmation that London is done for. Indeed, it is tragic that the UK, with its skills in AI and financial innovation, should allow this to happen. London was reborn as a financial centre when the US tightened the tax regime on foreign currency bonds in the 1960s and 1970s, driving the eurobond and eurocurrency markets to the Square Mile. A reverse-ferret on suffocating UK tax and regulation could do wonders.