Your phone rings. You recognize the number, but when you pick up, it’s someone else. What’s the deal?
Scammers are using fake caller ID information to trick you into thinking they are someone local, someone you trust – like a government agency or police department, or a company you do business with – like your bank or cable provider. The practice is called caller ID spoofing, and scammers don’t care whose phone number they use. One scammer recently used the phone number of an FTC employee.
Don’t rely on caller ID to verify who’s calling. It can be nearly impossible to tell whether the caller ID information is real. Here are a few tips for handling these calls:
- If you get a strange call from the government, hang up. If you want to check it out, visit the official (.gov) website for contact information. Government employees won’t call out of the blue to demand money or account information.
- Don’t give out — or confirm — your personal or financial information to someone who calls.
- Don’t wire money or send money using a reloadable card. In fact, never pay someone who calls out of the blue, even if the name or number on the caller ID looks legit.
- Feeling pressured to act immediately? Hang up. That’s a sure sign of a scam.
Want more tips for avoiding scams? Check out 10 Ways to Avoid Fraud.
If you’ve received a call from a scammer, with or without fake caller ID information, report it to the FTC and the FCC.
In reply to I sometimes give them an by Tom
In reply to Lost 4000$ last week because by payforit
You can report the call to the FTC and to TIGTA (the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration). Include the phone number it came from, along with any details you have. If you sent money by wire transfer, you can report to the wire transfer company too.
In reply to Seems to me we're almost by grover
In reply to Seems to me we're almost by grover
I am 100% disable and wheel chair bound and i get at least 2 - 3 calls each and every day from these scammers,pretending to be microsoft engineers or micosoft tech service and i have just won a trip or they are calling because i or a friend of mine gave them my number and also this one is a dooozie, returning my call!!!!! I don't call these people, i buy nothing on the internet anymore, got hijacked there.
In reply to Get a small digital voice by Here is a cure.
In reply to Get a small digital voice by Here is a cure.
In reply to What I don't understand is by MsX
In reply to SCAM - THIS IS MIKE FROM by Train2Man
In reply to SCAM - THIS IS MIKE FROM by Train2Man
In reply to SCAM - THIS IS MIKE FROM by Train2Man
I had a Company call and leave a message that said you are listed as a emergency contact please call right away. Once I call this # 214-396-5863 I ask for the company name they wouldn't give it to me they said oh we have the person you need to talk to. This lady said she was from the fraud division and on an E-payday loan from 2009 that I committed bank fraud I needed to get an attorney or pay them 3886.00 when the payday loan was for 150.00
I had paid 50.00 of it when I called them to say I was laid off 09/2009 to send me a bill they said no it had to be a bank card so they hit my bank everyday that week till they ran my bank charge up to 600.00 way over what the loan was so the bank shut the account down. I paid the bank back the fees of 600.00 and never opened another account. SO she said that was Bank Fraud they are coming after me. Once again I ask what there company name was and she said get a lawyer and hung up on me the phone # goes to a James Conner voicemail not listing the name of the company. I call the Texas Attorney Generals Office the consumer fair debt department.
In reply to My parents are getting calls by me
In reply to I like to know if this is a by vickie130
You can look at the contract you got when you signed up for the warranty. It should explain what the warranty will cover, and what you are supposed to pay.
If you think the company is not doing what the contract says, you can complain to your state Attorney General’s office. The Attorney General's office might tell you other places you can call in your state to get help.
In reply to Got a call from 206-382-4357, by Scam in New York
These are useful details for a complaint. Please report this at FTC.gov/complaint. The information you give will go into a database that law enforcement uses for investigations.
Comments you post here on the blog don't go into the database.
In reply to BEWARE of a company called by FTC, PLEASE ST…
If this is a debt collector, you have rights under federal law. We’ve written on this blog about it before and you can also find information about your rights in this article. Debt collectors are prohibited from saying that legal action will be taken against you, if doing so would be illegal or if they don’t intend to take the action. In addition, debt collectors may not contact you at work if they’re told (orally or in writing) that you’re not allowed to get calls there.
The law also gives you a right to dispute the debt. You must send a letter to the debt collector disputing the debt or part of it. Then, the debt collector has to obtain verification of the debt and mail it to you.
Please report your experience at ftc.gov/complaint so it becomes part of the FTC database that's used by investigators nationwide. We can't address complaints that you discuss in the blog comments.
Pagination