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Linda Sherry

Director, National Priorities, Consumer Action

http://www.consumer-action.org  

Linda Sherry, Consumer Action’s director of national priorities and one of the organization’s chief spokespersons, joined the San Francisco-based national consumer education and advocacy group in 1994 from a background as a weekly newspaper reporter.

Consumer Action (www.consumer-action.org), founded in 1971, has a national reputation for free multilingual consumer education on personal finance issues.

Sherry, who moved to Washington, DC, in August 2004 to establish an office for Consumer Action, is responsible for the organization’s national advocacy work and for the research and writing of Consumer Action’s free educational publications and web site content. Her recent projects for Consumer Action include publications on home buying, credit card terms and conditions, bankruptcy, ID theft, Internet privacy, cell phones and investing vs. savings. Sherry is chief surveyor and coordinator of Consumer Action’s popular pricing surveys of rates for credit cards and telephone services. She is the editor of Consumer Action’s newsletter, Consumer Action News.

Sherry has received awards for Consumer Action publications from the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators (Excellence in Consumer Education, 1996, 2000 and 2003) and U.S. Office of Consumer Affairs (1995 National Consumer Week). Sherry serves as a member of the National Consumers League Fraud Alliance steering committee.

Before joining Consumer Action, Sherry was managing editor of AsianWeek in San Francisco from 1991-1994. Previously she was a reporter at The Almanac newspapers in Menlo Park, CA; The New York Times Long Island Section and The East Hampton Star in East Hampton, NY. She was the founding editor of the Sag Harbor Herald, a weekly newspaper in Long Island, NY.

What is a fraud alert and how do I place one on my credit report?

Consumer education expert Linda Sherry discusses fraud alert and how to place it on your credit card.

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Host: What is a fraud alert and how do I place one on my credit report?

Linda Sherry: A fraud alert is the special notation on your credit report that will let creditors and people trying to open credit in your name know that you are a fraud victim and they should contact you before they open credit in your name. The first kind of fraud alert that you'll probably put on your account is an initial fraud alert and that lasts 90 days. You can renew that; you can renew that for up to seven years if you want to. You can also remove a fraud alert anytime you want to.

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