ROTTERDAM – A laptop stolen from a Pioneer Bank employee "contained
secured personal information of certain customers, including names,
social security numbers, street addresses, and account and debit card
numbers," the bank said in a letter to those customers.
Roy Pechtel, who uses the Pioneer branch on Altamont Ave. in Rotterdam,
received the letter in the mail over the weekend. Pechtel told
NewsChannel 13 he is concerned that his identity, and his retirement
account, could be at risk.
"When I called them today, they didn't really have an answer," Petchtel
said Monday. "They said their security people were trying to handle the
problem their own way. I said, 'Nah, you're trying to cover something
up here.'"
The laptop was stolen on January 26, the bank said in the letter.
Pioneer said police were notified immediately, but the bank did not
inform the affected customers or the state Attorney General’s Office
until February 23.
"Pioneer Bank has been working closely with authorities regarding the
theft," the bank said in a statement. "Protecting customer information
is of the utmost importance to Pioneer, and it’s a priority we take very
seriously."
Pioneer is not aware of any misuse of customers’ information as a
result of the breach, the bank said in the letter. Pioneer said it is
conducting additional monitoring on accounts, and extending one year of
free credit monitoring to affected customers.
Citing the ongoing investigation, a Pioneer executive declined to
answer a NewsChannel 13 reporter’s questions about where the laptop was
stolen, and why an employee had some customers’ personal information on
the laptop.
It was unclear late Monday whether the bank, or the employee, had
violated the law. The state Department of Financial Services, which
oversees the banking industry, is now investigating, a spokesman
confirmed.
Eva Velasquez, president and CEO of the California-based Identity Theft
Resource Center, told NewsChannel 13 it is not uncommon for escrow
officers and loan officers to have customer information on their laptop.
But Velasquez said data breaches involving laptops are not common in
the financial sector. She encouraged affected customers to inquire about
additional layers of protection that might be available to them.
No comments:
Post a Comment