All times shown are Eastern Time (GMT-5:00) | Home -> Forums -> Lottery News -> Bank details of lottery winners found by road Bank details of lottery winners found by road Insider Buzz: Bank details of lottery winners found by roadThe bank details of 200 wealthy people — including 3 UK lottery winners — have been found by the side of the road after apparently falling out of a couriers van. The details belonged to the customers of finance firm Prudential and included items such as checks and other personal documents that criminals could use to steal the identities of those people. The documents were found near a access road for Junction 11 of the M4 near Reading by a vehicle recovery driver. The documents were on their way to a secure storage facility in Essex via DHL. "He (the DHL courier) appears not to have noticed that the door of his van was open and the box appears to have fallen out," said a source close to the incident. "The Pru (Prudential) is clearly not happy at all. It has suspended all use of DHL until the investigation is concluded." Prudential have swiftly assured their customers that they will not incur any financial loss from the blunder. "Protection of our customers' data is of paramount importance to us and we are contacting them immediately," said a spokesman for Prudential. "The key thing is that none of those customers will suffer any financial loss as a result of this." Wire Reports We'd love to see your comments here! Register for a FREE membership — it takes just a few moments — and you'll be able to post comments here and on any of our forums. If you're already a member, you can Log In to post a comment. 7 comments. Last comment 4 years ago by . Idaho United States Member #56982 November 21, 2007 3940 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 11, 2008, 1:26 pm - IP Logged | |
To have the details of your bank information, just fall out the back of a truck is awful. It should have been more secure. | | |
Pennsylvania United States Member #56485 October 28, 2007 425 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 11, 2008, 9:42 pm - IP Logged | |
To have the details of your bank information, just fall out the back of a truck is awful. It should have been more secure. It is a rare event but it can happen..Lucky the person who found it did the right thing and notified...I was thinking to myself something like... what if a bag of money fell out an armored truck what would you do? | | |
MI United States Member #20554 August 14, 2005 57 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 12, 2008, 7:03 am - IP Logged | |
It is a rare event but it can happen..Lucky the person who found it did the right thing and notified...I was thinking to myself something like... what if a bag of money fell out an armored truck what would you do? With my luck, I would open the bag and the dye pack would go off and I'd be accused of robbing a bank. Seriously, I would turn it in at the nearest police station and get a receipt. | | |
United States Member #5437 June 30, 2004 21911 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 12, 2008, 10:18 am - IP Logged | |
The driver should be held accountable for his neglect. When you have an important job, you should cover all steps to make sure you are able to carry it through. If not give it to someone who can.. | | |
United States Member #39102 May 3, 2006 315 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 12, 2008, 2:30 pm - IP Logged | |
To have the details of your bank information, just fall out the back of a truck is awful. It should have been more secure. that kinda truck was it??? A PICK UP TRUCK!!!!!
waiting patiently for my jackpot
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Wandering Aimlessly United States Member #25708 November 5, 2005 4403 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 13, 2008, 2:44 am - IP Logged | |
I'm not exactly sure what information was disclosed, but sometimes ID theft is grossly exaggerated. I wrote more, but I decided if I want to rant about the fear that we live in today, I'll start a blog. I do agree its on the side & we need to be careful about whom we talk to and the personal information we furnish, but most of it is widely available anyway. You can't file taxes without using your soc sec # & millions of people put everything about their lives on a form & into an envelope with a stamp and hand it to the postman. (About 40 million people use online tax services.) We've been doing that for generations along with sending checks to every Tom, Dick & Harry at the phone company, electric company, water company, etc., and checks have our name, address, and bank account number on them (and personal signature!) Then we get statements in the mail from every checking account, savings account, money market, CD, blah, blah, blah. This definitely was an unfortunate incident, but it happens. | | |
Wandering Aimlessly United States Member #25708 November 5, 2005 4403 Posts Offline | | Posted: January 13, 2008, 3:19 am - IP Logged | |
The driver should be held accountable for his neglect. When you have an important job, you should cover all steps to make sure you are able to carry it through. If not give it to someone who can.. I wrote in my last post: I do agree its on the side & we need to be careful Brain malfunction or bad typo? I meant to write "I do agree it's on the rise (identity theft) and we need to be careful. Tntea, yes everyone should do the best job he/she can, but mistakes happen. Guess what? Doctors kill people everyday and politicians bankrupt countries. Cops shoot people too. Nobody can get up in the morning and do a perfect job everyday. The driver goofed and probably feels a lot worse than you do right now, especially if he was disciplined or lost his job. He should have been more careful, but obviously something went wrong. You have no idea if the driver has held that position for 10 years with an excellent record. Maybe he was assigned a van with faulty doors or locks. I know you are perfect, but give this guy a break. | | |
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