Identity theft

Identity fraud
There are 5 related items to this topic
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Fletcher, David 1952- :"It's been said that our laws make it too easy for people to ste...

Date: 2012

From: Fletcher, David, 1952- :Digital cartoons

By: Dominion post (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0022716

Description: 'The Politician' cartoon strip. A man sits at a desk with a piece of paper and says that an ombudsman has reported that laws in New Zealand make identity theft too easy. Another man wonders if the ombudsman's identity can be trusted. Context: Former ombudsman Mel Smith uncovered severe deficiencies in the law that give criminals "a simple means for identity theft" by making it easy to change their names. (Stuff.co.nz 27 August 2012) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :'I suspect identity theft'. 2 October 2012

Date: 2012

From: Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Waikato Times].

By: Waikato Times (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0023047

Description: Shows a bank teller telling her boss that the man at the counter, who appears as Napoleon, make be engaging in identity theft. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Ekers, Paul, 1961-:"When I gave my assistants a credit card I didn't realise they could...

Date: 2013

From: Ekers, Paul, 1961-:[Digital cartoons published in the New Zealand Herald and other publications]

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0026888

Description: Nigella Lawson cuts two lines of cocaine with her credit card and explains 'When I gave my assistants a credit card I didn't realise they could use them t buy things...' According to sisters Elisabetta and Francesca Grillo, who had worked for Nigella for more than a decade, the celebrity chef was a drug addict. In december 2013 the sisters were tried for fraud, having stolen $1.38 million using credit cards given to them by Nigella and her ex-husband, millionaire art dealer Charles Saatchi. Nigella Lawson was accused of having been addicted to taking cocaine, a common way being to 'cut' the poweder into two 'lines' for sniffing by dividing with a credit card. Colour and black and white versions are available Quantity: 2 digital cartoon(s).

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"An expert claims identity theft is on the increase." "You don't need to worry about th...

Date: 2010

From: Fletcher, David, 1952- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0013449

Description: 'The Politician' cartoon strips, commenting on the foibles of politicians and political issues in New Zealand and published in the Dominion Post. These cartoons tend to reflect the current events of the day without dealing directly with them. Records for the cartoons in this collection have not been enhanced by a full 'scope and contents' as they are essentially self-explanatory and can be searched by key word. They do have subject headings. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

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Nearly 250,000 Kiwis have at least one alias - News. 6 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Waikato Times].

Reference: DCDL-0016284

Description: The title reads 'Nearly 250,000 Kiwis have at least one alias - News'. Two people sign into a hotel for an illicit weekend giving their names as 'Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow'. Context; the cartoon makes a point about the number of New Zealanders who have aliases. The people in the cartoon give away the nature of their tryst by choosing the names of two infamous Americans about whom the film 'Bonnie and Clyde' was made. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).