WASHINGTON – The e-mail or letter looks official, and it contains an attention-grabbing message: The state is holding on to your unclaimed property, which may be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. All you have to do is pay a fee upfront or provide your personal information and the money is yours.
But the letters and e-mails are the work of scammers, not state officials. A growing number of people across the country are receiving these messages and some are falling for them, losing thousands of dollars or becoming victims of identity theft in the process.
"These scams are just rampant," said David Milby of the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators (NAUPA), which represents state unclaimed property programs. "The e-mail from the public we've been getting about this has increased tenfold in the past year."
Some scammers pretend they work for NAUPA and have even use its letterhead to make their pitch.
Besides costing victims money, consumer advocates say this kind of fraud diminishes public trust in state agencies that handle unclaimed property and makes it harder for them to do their jobs.
Unclaimed property is cash or other assets considered lost or abandoned when an owner can't be found after a certain period of time. It includes dormant savings accounts, life insurance payments, death benefits, uncashed utility dividends and the contents of abandoned safe deposit boxes.
There is plenty of it. In 2015, unclaimed property agencies in the U.S. collected $7.8 billion and returned $3.2 billion to rightful owners, according to NAUPA. At last count in 2013, states were holding on to $43 billion in unclaimed property.
The treasurer, comptroller or auditor of each state maintains a list of abandoned property and runs an online database that anyone can search by name for free. Forty states and the District of Columbia provide that information to a NAUPA-endorsed national website that can be searched.