The story is from the CBS Early Show in 2006. The video clip is a very educational way to spend 4 minutes of your time.
This story was also featured in Good Housekeeping magazine and was the first part of that article once available online here http://www.goodhousekeeping.com/money/consumer/id-theft-0807 but I have the physical magazine article myself and may consider posting it later.
To quote part of the CBS Video Transcript:
One of those victims was Anndorie Sachs. Several months ago, she got an alarming phone call: her newborn baby had just tested positive for illegal drugs — but Sachs hasn't given birth in years.http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/10/09/earlyshow/living/ConsumerWatch/main2073225.shtml
"I was absolutely floored, you would just never imagine in a million years that something could happen like this," she told The Early Show consumer correspondent Susan Koeppen. "As much as I denied it, they just kept insisting that yes, I was the mother of this child, there was nothing I could say to get out of it."
To make matters worse, authorities showed up at her door the next day, called her an unfit mother and threatened to take away her four kids.
"When you know you're innocent and you didn't do anything wrong, it just absolutely — I was in tears, I was a wreck," she said.
It turned out that someone had stolen her driver's license, walked into a hospital, and had a baby and left Sachs with a $10,000 bill and a fight to clear her name.
Chris Dorn, a fraud expert with Ingenix, a company that tracks medical ID theft cases, says victims of medical identity theft also have to worry about medical records being altered with the crook's information substituted for their own.
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