We are seeing a rise in thefts through common phone and email scams. Scammers will often try to create a sense of urgency around making a payment immediately to free a loved one from jail or claim they are the IRS, Border Patrol or other Law Enforcement Agency and state that you or a loved one will be imprisoned or have a warrant issued for you if you do not comply with their demands. We want to stress that AT NO POINT IN TIME will a Law Enforcement ask you to provide credit card or banking information over the phone. Law Enforcement will also never ask you to purchase gift cards or other redeemable items. It is not common practice for any Law Enforcement Agency to process payments of any kind over the phone.
If you believe you are being scammed, you should hang up immediately. If you feel the need to check into things further DO NOT call them back on the number provided to you. Search the internet for the agency they claim to be from and contact that agency directly to verify further.
Victims locally are losing tens of thousands of dollars to these scams. Please share this information with your elderly family, friends and neighbors since they are the most susceptible to these scams.
The information below is from the AARP.
We may have entered the digital age, but the telephone remains a key weapon in scammers' arsenals. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) received about 1.8 million fraud complaints in 2021 in which a contact method was identified, and in 36 percent of cases a call was the swindler’s way in.
Once they get you on the line, phone scammers use false promises, aggressive sales pitches and phony threats to pry loose information they can use to steal your money or identity (or both).
It’s easy to understand why crooks love to dial you up. Based on the results of a March 2021 survey, call-security app maker Truecaller estimates that some 59 million Americans lost money to a phone scam in the previous 12 months. According to FTC data, the median loss in scams that start with a call is $1,200, higher than for any other method of contact.
Technology has made this illicit work easy. With auto dialers, shady operators can blast out robocalls by the millions for just a few dollars a day. Readily available spoofing tools can trick your caller ID into displaying a genuine government or corporate number, or one that appears to be local, to increase the chances that you’ll answer.
Have you seen this scam?
Whether live or automated, scam callers often pose as representatives of government agencies or familiar tech, travel, retail or financial companies, supposedly calling with valuable information. It might be good news. (You’re eligible for a big cash prize! You’ve been preselected for this great vacation deal!) It might be bad. (You owe back taxes. There’s a problem with your credit card account.) Whatever the issue, it can be resolved if you’ll just, say, provide your Social Security number or make an immediate payment.
Phone scammers might also impersonate charity fundraisers or even your grandchildren, playing on your generosity or family bonds to get you to fork over money. And, like the rest of us, they're thinking a lot about COVID-19. Nearly 3 in 5 respondents to the Truecaller survey reported receiving a pandemic-related scam call or text message in the previous 12 months as crooks sought to exploit people's fears for their health and financial well-being.
Warning Signs
How to protect yourself from this scam
