I see some gaps i.e. rural births, but I am horrified of the ease of an ID change. Anyway, we check our ID numbers with the data from HA and so far we have not had one which came up wrong in 7 years and hundreds of checks. However, sometimes the surname mismatches in case of marriage/divorce, but those could always be resolved.
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Houses4Rent
"We treat your investment as we treat our own"
marc@houses4rent.co.za www.houses4rent.co.za
083-3115551
Global Residential Property Investor / Specialized Letting Agent & Property Manager -
I see some gaps i.e. rural births, but I am horrified of the ease of an ID change. Anyway, we check our ID numbers with the data from HA and so far we have not had one which came up wrong in 7 years and hundreds of checks. However, sometimes the surname mismatches in case of marriage/divorce, but those could always be resolved.
Secondly, banks, credit bureaus or any other company making use of HA also does not get notified of an identity change. For some reason unknown HA is not allowed to inform any institution. However, if you have a contact within HA they can give you that information. We had a fraud department that checked ID Numbers specifically for identity change, but this was done through a contact within HA.Comment
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Like I said, unfortunately, HA is not allowed to give out this information for some reason, but many companies do have access to check on this.
If anyone ever tells you this does not exist, I have my own list of about 10,000 people who we identified changed their IDs. I have both old and new IDs. All of them, without exception, have the same in common: Both IDs are verifying when checked against credit bureaus, all have the same names and surname but different ID numbers, all the old ID numbers have defaults and judgments and the new ID numbers are clean.
Also, like Noseweek revealed, they have a list of 28 700+ people who changed their IDs in one financial year. So, this is very common.Comment
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