It
sounds like a joke to be declared dead when you are very much alive,
but if it’s the Social Security Administration that makes the mistake
-possibly with just a typo- it can cause all sorts of problems for the
living. And it could be years before you even find out about it.
Since
1980, it has maintained the Death Master File, a database of more than
86 million deceased, SSN-holding Americans. When you are medically
recorded as dead, you are included in this master file and your SSN is
retired, disabling any future use; a few weeks later, Medicare, the IRS,
law enforcement, and employers essentially “scratch you out of
existence.”
In 2011, the Office of the Inspector General
conducted an audit of the Death Master File, and found that, from May
2007 to April 2010, 36,657 living people (12,219 per year) had been
prematurely added, nulling them legally dead. After probing deeper,
officials estimated that between 700 and 2,800 people were erroneously
declared dead every month since the list’s inception. Over the file's
35-year history, the Inspector General suspects that more than 500,000
Americans have been affected.
Affected how? If you
receive Social Security benefits, those will stop. Banks won’t let you
open a new account, and can freeze funds on your existing accounts.
Potential employers, landlords, insurers, and service providers will
think you are an identity thief. And identity thieves can really mess
things up for you. Read about
the dangers of paperwork premature death at Pricenomics.
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