Odd Situation... Idenity theft/Inadvertantly omitting transcripts?

<p>I graduated high school, took some time off, went to a vocational school to be a massage therapist and then decided to go back to school at a CC.
About halfway through my first semester, I got a letter saying I was academicaly disqualified from a different cc about 25 miles away (one I never actually attended).
After trying to figure out what was going on, it appears that someone got a hold of my SSN, opened a few credit cards and was taking some classes. I was told this was probably fairly easy for whoever did it because I have a hispanic last name and she probably did it to make a job think she was here on a student visa or something. I got the financial end of it all figured out, but now that I'm almost ready to transfer I'm wondering if theres more I don't know about.
Obviously, when I transfer I'm only going to put down the school I have actually been going to. Would there be a way for me to find out what schools "I" have attended? Would this look like, come time to transfer (planning on transferring to a state school if that matters, CSULB, CSUSB or SDSU), I was hiding a transcript full of bad grades? If something like that turned up, would a school I was potentially accepted at confront me about it or just denying me without asking?
I'm trying to get into nursing programs and knowing how competive they can be I don't need this kinda stuff making it harder! help!</p>

<p>nope, just add it to the "additional comments" part of your application. Tell them someone jacked your SSID and pretended to be you etc and you should be fine.</p>

<p>Look, if you totally got the financial end of this figured out, then that is really good. But, did you get the other aspects of the identity theft figured out? You might want to seek a lawyer's council and make sure of things. I really would do that.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oig/misused/victim.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oig/misused/victim.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>I'm not playing with this, you know? That identity theft is serious stuff.</p>

<p>Good luck and bless you.</p>