Taking money out of an IRA into your checking bank account is usually two clicks with my bank, I'd get a warning about losing interest if I take the money out but I can do it anyway and the money is available instantly - for all intentions and purposes it might just as well be in a checking account, and it certainly won't make any different to an attacker who got into my account.
>>I'm not saying that investigating the $250k is not important; but just not more urgent than the $2k theft.
I'd argue that it's a lot more urgent. What if you were paying for a house tomorrow, and the money is gone, so you lose the house? Or you are a small company that has to pay its tax bill for the year, but the money is gone? Or you have to pay for an expensive operation that won't go forward otherwise?
2k is not as important in a way that if you are really short of 2k, then there is a plethora of options to come up with 2k on a short notice(some astonishingly bad like payday loans but there are options) - while if you are out of 250k and need 250k then most likely you are absolutely screwed.
Again, to repeat my final point - don't make assumptions about people's money.
>>I'm not saying that investigating the $250k is not important; but just not more urgent than the $2k theft.
I'd argue that it's a lot more urgent. What if you were paying for a house tomorrow, and the money is gone, so you lose the house? Or you are a small company that has to pay its tax bill for the year, but the money is gone? Or you have to pay for an expensive operation that won't go forward otherwise?
2k is not as important in a way that if you are really short of 2k, then there is a plethora of options to come up with 2k on a short notice(some astonishingly bad like payday loans but there are options) - while if you are out of 250k and need 250k then most likely you are absolutely screwed.
Again, to repeat my final point - don't make assumptions about people's money.