MENU
  • Loading ...
  • Loading ...

Broome Tourism

Latest News Broome Tourism

Your 401(k) is the new identity theft target

18 May 2026 By foxnews

Your 401(k) is the new identity theft target

Are you looking for a holiday? Get special deals.

 

An impostor phoned Alight Solutions, the recordkeeper for Colgate-Palmolive's 401(k) plan, and identified herself as a Colgate employee. She asked to update the contact information on an account. Months later, the entire $751,430 balance had been sent in a single lump sum to a Las Vegas address and bank account. The real account holder, Paula Disberry, was living in South Africa.

Disberry sued Alight, Colgate's benefits committee and BNY Mellon, the plan's custodian, to recover the money. The case was later settled on undisclosed terms. The court never ruled on whether Alight had to restore the funds.

In February 2026, the Government Accountability Office told the U.S. Department of Labor to issue new guidance on retirement plan participant data. The GAO cited eleven separate lawsuits filed between 2009 and 2024 under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, the federal law governing private retirement plans.

When account takeover hits a 401(k), the consumer protections that govern credit card fraud do not apply.

 Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report

REMOVE YOUR DATA TO PROTECT YOUR RETIREMENT FROM SCAMMERS

The Disberry case began when an impostor called Alight's Benefits Information Center. She gave Disberry's name, the last four digits of her Social Security number, her date of birth and the mailing address Alight had on file. That was enough to clear the call center's security check.

She then asked Alight to update the contact information on Disberry's account. Alight did not send an alert to Disberry's existing email address or phone number, both of which it had on file. Instead, the company issued a temporary password through the mail.

Disberry's plan had a 14-day waiting period between an address change and any distribution. Her lawsuit alleged that Alight skipped it. Within weeks, the impostor logged in, requested a full payout, and BNY Mellon mailed a check to a Las Vegas address.

Heide Bartnett, a former Abbott Laboratories employee, sued Alight over a $245,000 401(k) distribution. She alleged that a hacker used the plan portal's "forgot password" feature to reset her credentials and trigger the payout. Other retirement plan recordkeepers have faced similar cybertheft lawsuits.

The problem extends beyond 401(k) accounts. The FBI's April 2026 Internet Crime Report found that Americans 60 and older lost $7.7 billion to internet crime in 2025, a 59% jump from the year before. Investment fraud accounted for $3.5 billion of those losses, making retirement-age savers a major target for online criminals. 

INSIDE A SCAMMER'S DAY AND HOW THEY TARGET YOU

Account takeovers begin with information someone already has. Names, dates of birth, partial SSNs and email addresses appear in dark web breach dumps, often combined with leaked passwords from unrelated services. When the account holder reuses a password across accounts, hackers can test that breach data directly against the recordkeeper's login portal.

Disberry's takeover bypassed the login portal entirely. The impostor never logged in to Disberry's account directly. She called Alight's call center, used what she already knew about Disberry to clear identity verification and had the contact information changed. After that, the temporary password Alight mailed went somewhere only the impostor could intercept.

Some thieves skip the recordkeeper and go straight for the account holder. The New York Times documented the case of Barry Heitin, a 76-year-old retired lawyer, who lost $740,000 in 2024 after receiving a call from someone claiming to be a federal fraud investigator. The caller convinced Heitin that his retirement accounts were under attack and walked him through transferring the money out himself. He believed he was helping a federal investigation.

Federal protections for retirement account theft are limited, but several account-level controls cost nothing and may make takeovers harder.

HOW TO STOP IMPOSTOR BANK SCAMS BEFORE THEY DRAIN YOUR WALLET

Account-change alerts on the recordkeeper portal only work if the recordkeeper sends them. The Disberry case showed what can happen when those alerts go unsent.

A strong identity theft monitoring service can add another layer of protection by watching for suspicious activity beyond the retirement plan portal. Some services let you link bank, credit card and investment accounts so you can receive alerts when unfamiliar transactions appear. In a retirement account takeover, that could help flag suspicious money movement even if the recordkeeper misses the outgoing transfer.

Many identity theft monitoring services also watch for changes across your credit reports, scan the dark web for exposed personal information and search data broker or people-search sites for your details. Some plans also include fraud resolution support and identity theft insurance for eligible recovery costs.

If you are unsure whether criminals have already exposed your information, take action now. Start with a free identity breach scan to see whether your data appears in known leaks. Early detection gives you more control and helps you respond before fraud spreads. You can also check whether your personal information is already being used for identity theft, fraud or appearing on the dark web.

See my tips and best picks on Best Identity Theft Protection at CyberGuy.com

Retirement accounts can feel separate from the everyday fraud risks we hear about with credit cards, email accounts and bank logins. But this case shows how quickly a 401(k) can become a target when someone has enough personal information to fool a call center or reset account access. The scary part is that a stolen retirement account may not come with the same consumer protections people expect from credit card fraud. That makes prevention and early warning signs even more important. Turn on multi-factor authentication, enable every account alert your plan offers and ask your employer or plan administrator what happens after an address, phone number or bank account change. No one should have to find out months later that their life savings disappeared. The earlier you spot suspicious activity, the better your chances of stopping the damage before it becomes a financial nightmare.

Should retirement plans be required to send stronger alerts before any major account change or distribution, especially when someone's life savings are on the line? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.comCyberguy.com

 Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report

Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

More News

Turning 65? Month-by-month plan to protect yourself
Turning 65? Month-by-month plan to protect yourself
Rideable robot looks ready to stomp all over us
Rideable robot looks ready to stomp all over us
Tourist takes forbidden plunge at iconic landmark as visitors watch, stunned
Tourist takes forbidden plunge at iconic landmark as visitors watch, stunned
Paul McCartney reveals how a 'happy' teen hitchhiking trip with George Harrison delivered a shock
Paul McCartney reveals how a 'happy' teen hitchhiking trip with George Harrison delivered a shock
Teen stumbles on mysterious coin from legendary city, puzzling archaeologists over its journey
Teen stumbles on mysterious coin from legendary city, puzzling archaeologists over its journey
2026 Eastern Conference Finals best bets, odds, picks: Cleveland Cavaliers vs New York Knicks
2026 Eastern Conference Finals best bets, odds, picks: Cleveland Cavaliers vs New York Knicks
MS NOW host roasted for questioning if Mike Johnson is putting 'God over the Declaration of Independence'
MS NOW host roasted for questioning if Mike Johnson is putting 'God over the Declaration of Independence'
Joy Behar warns 'we're all going to die' in heated clash with co-hosts over TrumpRx initiative
Joy Behar warns 'we're all going to die' in heated clash with co-hosts over TrumpRx initiative
Garrick Higgo splits from caddie after costly two-stroke penalty for missing PGA Championship tee time: report
Garrick Higgo splits from caddie after costly two-stroke penalty for missing PGA Championship tee time: report
Chiefs receiver Rashee Rice jailed for 30 days after probation violation and it could get worse
Chiefs receiver Rashee Rice jailed for 30 days after probation violation and it could get worse
'World's sexiest fan' drops her World Cup anthem and here's why you never assist a bike thief
'World's sexiest fan' drops her World Cup anthem and here's why you never assist a bike thief
NAACP asks Black athletes to boycott SEC, ACC powers in latest sports-as-politics pressure campaign
NAACP asks Black athletes to boycott SEC, ACC powers in latest sports-as-politics pressure campaign
LSU latest basketball program to tap into G League ranks, signing former pro guard RJ Luis Jr
LSU latest basketball program to tap into G League ranks, signing former pro guard RJ Luis Jr
Texas company hatches live chicks from artificial eggs in breakthrough that could revive the dodo: report
Texas company hatches live chicks from artificial eggs in breakthrough that could revive the dodo: report
Country superstar Ella Langley pulls off incredible career accomplishment on the music charts
Country superstar Ella Langley pulls off incredible career accomplishment on the music charts
Six Flags guests stranded 245 feet in air after power outage forces coaster evacuation
Six Flags guests stranded 245 feet in air after power outage forces coaster evacuation
Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders took over Greece during an offseason bikini birthday vacation
Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders took over Greece during an offseason bikini birthday vacation
Can Victor Wembanyama be the true face of the NBA as a European? | Bobby Burack
Can Victor Wembanyama be the true face of the NBA as a European? | Bobby Burack
Nate Bargatze reveals family-focused vision behind $350M Nashville theme park ahead of his first movie release
Nate Bargatze reveals family-focused vision behind $350M Nashville theme park ahead of his first movie release
Jalen Hurts absent from AJ Brown's wedding as Eagles trade rumors continue to swirl: report
Jalen Hurts absent from AJ Brown's wedding as Eagles trade rumors continue to swirl: report
Latest News

copyright © 2026 Broome Tourism.   All rights reserved.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z