530-927-5077

Country: USA
530 area code: California (Chico, Davis, Placerville)
Read comments below about 5309275077. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • 0
    Rocklyn
    threatening msg-wish me good luck.  Had heavy middle eastern accent.  No mention of name of company or anything.  I am sick and tired of these calls.  I have reported but we all know how that goes.  Nothing done about it.
    • Call type: Debt collector
  • 0
    chdoda
    i had the same thing happen to me. i get a call from this number everyday. 530-927-5077 how can i find out who this is?  and if this number is from a real law firm or a scam       /
  • 0
    Davis
    I get the same threatening calls and i dont know why they keep calling. 5309275077. how can i find out about this company?
  • 0
    altogurl17
    I have also recieved threatening calls from this number, the nam says his name is lance martin. they call nearly everday and harras me at home and at work.
  • 0
    Denise
    | 1 reply
    I just got a call at work and it is a scam.  Heavy indian accent with american name.  They are trying to scare you  into giving them money.  When I answered today, I just told him I would have him put in jail he ever called again.
  • 0
    T.J.B.
    I got a call from them today and the man's name is Lance Martin.. told me that I have to be in CA on Monday to appear in court... it really scared me... but I'm not stressing cuz I didn't do anything wrong...
  • 0
    T.J.B. replies to Denise
    What did he say when you told him you would have him put in jail if he ever called you again???
  • 0
    Help me
    | 1 reply
    I just got off the phone with someone from this company.  Said I had an unpaid PayDay loan and that I am being sued for for fraud and a couple of other things.  Said criminal papers were going to served to my place of work.  Couldn't tell me the name of the company that said I had an outstanding loan.  I did take out some loans six months ago but they have all been paid.  Scary thing is though he did have the last 4 of my social and where I worked.  Wants me to pay $400 today and $389 by next Thursday to clear up lawsuit.  I don't know what to do.  I am sure it's a scam, but I can't afford to have some fake papers show up at my work.  I knew it was stupid to take out those loans.
    • Caller: 530-927-5077
  • 0
    RN replies to Help me
    This is a scam.  First of all, no one is going to call you and tell you that they are going to show up at your place of employment to file papers against you.  If it is a lawsuit, you will be notified first from the county in which you reside.  They will attempt to notify you at home via certified mail first.  These people want you to verify your bank information and/or provide them with the information and they are recording your answers to those questions.  If you say "yes", they will take money from your account.  Don't fall into their trap.  There is never a call back number and if it is, no one ever answers.  Several area codes are used, 530, 605, 429.  Federal consumer law states that a company has to identify themselves and tell you up front that this is an attempt to collect a debt.  They never provide this info.
  • 0
    reverse harasser
    | 1 reply
    Yes, I got a call from these scammers. When I pressed for information....DETAILS...they get nasty and hang up. They say vague things like, you have to be in court in CA in 3 days, or "the charge off date is before November of 20xx" I told him I wanted a DATE to verify when the funds were supposedly put into my account. Then he got nasty and hung up again. So, I called them back....and called them back...and called them back. By the time I was done, they answered the phone and said "don't call this number anymore." Awwww, the poor scammers were tired of reverse harassment. So I redialed for another hour (just to be sure they got my point).

    A couple of times they answered and said some pretty rude things like "go f##k someone and earn some money."  

    Redial is a wonderful thing!

    But, they stopped calling!
    • Call type: Debt collector
  • 0
    Cathy
    Continue to contact me via work and cell phone.  I have had this before and already have threatened to turn them in.  I will do it again if needed, however; I have learned that if you ignore the calls on your cell, they eventually quit.  

    Please do not say "yes" to any information asked of you.
    • Caller: 530-927-5077
    • Call type: Debt collector
  • 0
    Jen
    They are leaving messages like the one's described above on my home and work number. I'm wondering if it is a legitimate bill collector but these messages are ridiculous.
    • Caller: Doesn't leave the info
  • 0
    Susie
    I have been called from these scammers for the last 4 months - they call my cell and my home - and they harass me telling me that I never paid my payday loan off - and I did - i have threatened them numerous times - to me it is some god damn foreigner trying to scam American people - they need to all go back to their country - I am so tired of this crap with their heavy accents - I wish I could tie them up by their balls.  number on caller is:  530-927-5077
  • 0
    Joy
    I have received 2 phone calls from these people. They tried the "payday loan" scam on me as well but I have NEVER taken out a payday loan so I knew right away it was a scam. I also called THEM back repeatedly on the 530-927-5077 number and gave them a taste of their own harrassment. Anyone who receives a call from these people should not be concerned or intimidated because they are definitely SCAMMERS and NOT a legitimate collection agency. They are very rude and unprofessional and become very ugly when questioned or confronted. They always have Indian/Middle Eastern accents with very generic American names (John Greene, Gary Walker, Steven Jones, Lance Martin).
    • Call type: Debt collector
  • 0
    Joy replies to reverse harasser
    I called them back and "harrassed" them too. Most fun I had all week. They do get very "ugly" when confronted, though. LOL
  • 0
    jen
    | 1 reply
    i had a call at work today sayin i was had a lawsuit on me for fraud and i stole money and its been found in my bank account.  first off, ive never in my life owned a credit card and second off i dont have a checking account.  i do cash, prepaid card, and i have a savings i only use for direct deposit from my work.  i did fill out an app on payday loan as well and this is what is going on.  im only 23 years old married and i have a daughter who is going to be 3 in may.  i am in school for criminal investigation and in order to do that i am required to have a clean record.  i have contacted my work to see if they can track the number but i know i didnt do anything wrong.  the guy sounded oriental but i am not sure like i said im only 23 and have never done anything bad and i dont even have a credit line wat so ever.  i do cash for everything and im getting harrassed this way.  i was quite shooken up at the time and now i am angry.
  • 0
    The Saint replies to jen
    Kudos to "Sam" for giving the most intelligent and informative posts on this scam. READ, Bookmark and use as needed:

    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-631-456-4041/2

    I have been receiving phone calls from this group since late April / early May of 2010.  There is a good chance that they also attempted to contact me roughly two years ago before I entered into Chapter 7 Bankruptcy protection, as I faintly remember hearing the same script more or less.

    As others have stated, the callers are difficult to understand.  Generally speaking their command of the English language is quite poor and their accents are hard to follow. At times they will get certain words or phrases mixed up.  It would be funny if it wasn't for the fact that they had:

    a) Your SSN
    b) Your home address
    c) Your work address
    d) Your banking info
    e) Names, numbers and potentially the addresses of "references"
    f) A complete and total lack of ethics and a basic understanding of the FDCPA.  

    I have personally filed reports with the following agencies, often with limited (if any) success:

    Local Police
    my state's Attorney General's office
    FTC
    FBI
    Secret Service

    Generally the local police won't be able to help much.  The callers are using a combination of prepaid cell phones and VoIP, making them difficult to trace.  Also at their disposal are various spoofing tactics being implemented to catch people off guard - meaning the number that appears on your Caller ID isn't the number that is calling you for starters.  Without gaining a subpoena for the billing information for the numbers in question, the local police won't be able to get very far.  

    My state's Attorney General's office couldn't offer much assistance either.  I received a form letter in the mail that my complaint was received and I would be contacted if they needed additional info.  It was more or less the same information I obtained from the FTC.  They each advised me not to give the individuals over the phone any account information or to authorize payment.  That's just common sense, though.

    I never got anything from the FBI, either.  There is a good chance that since I haven't suffered a monetary loss that my concerns are low on the totem pole.  I hate to say this, but that is truly the case. Unless you were in the hole for a $1,000 (or more) you aren't going to get much more than "sorry to hear about your situation, change your phone number and move on".  I seemed to get some activity from the Secret Service.  I spoke with agent Doug Zloto. (Google him, referencing threads like these plus his name and you'll find his number also)  He seemed to care a bit more than the average person, but after giving him access to my Google Voice account, there has been no further activity from him that I'm aware of.

    In the meantime I changed the wireless number the fraudsters had access to, they have no direct way to get a hold of me.  (Calls at work have ceased for some reason)  That in turn resulted in my "references" getting phone calls from the crooks.  Here is a word of caution for women that have been getting these calls - don't say anything and just hang up.  The callers are quite abusive towards women callers.  Why?  Possibly the culture.  If they are Indian / Pakistani, women are second class citizens there.  You will be treated like garbage.  This happened to a family member when she was trying her best to be extremely nice over the phone.  

    The callers currently attempt to reach me through the female family member and an unused Google Voice number that they managed to find of mine.  I keep the Google Voice number open because, well, I can't delete it yet.  So, about every day, 4-5 times a day for the last week, I get voice messages from them.  It's usually just two full messages though - the other calls are broken up with static or they are attempts to read the script until the callers then screw up.  Really, they are that adamant on getting the script 100% that they will hang up mid-sentence and call back 30 seconds later.  

    At this point it's a stalemate with these people.  

    1) While they have the lion's share of information on us, they can't really do anything with this information.  

    Why?  Think about it.

    If they were to ever take funds out of your account without authorization, it's fraud and worse (for them) it is traceable.  That's why they won't do anything with your information, contrary to threats they make.  The money from your account has to go somewhere, and either your bank or a law enforcement agency can determine where the money was routed.  As a bank customer you are protected - you'd get the stolen money back in your account after 7-10 business days and the bank would be temporarily out the funds deducted from your account while they conducted their investigation.  The bank, along with law enforcement, would track down the fraudsters and apprehend them.  The fraudsters do not want to incur the wrath of a bank, just extort money out of you.  Remember that.    

    Your authorization would absolve the bank from any and all liability, leaving you holding the bag.  Never give them authorization for anything - for all you know the call is recorded.  

    2) We have no information on them.

    Seriously, this has been going on at least since 2008, possibly longer than that based on some accounts. (6 years??? Holy crap!)  You would think someone would have slipped up by now.  Sadly, they haven't.  We can continue to grow our own intel on them and compile lists of aliases and phone numbers used, along with paraphrases of scripts used in order to educate other victims.  I'm actually putting together a site now in the meantime where I'll host audio files and lists of previous numbers used.  800notes.com is great, but no two calls are exactly the same.  It would be nice to have a site dedicated to the scam and how it works.

    So that's where I am with these calls.  I have suffered no monetary loss, though I have been harassed both at home and at work.  They threaten me with arrest and other "fun" things in order to get me convinced I have to pay them.  My friends and family have been targeted and local and federal law enforcement agencies haven't been able to put a stop to things.  So, it is what it is.  I am out a wireless phone number I had for roughly six years, which is terrible since I was using that line when looking for a new job.  

    Whenever I'm bored I spoof my number using Google Voice and return the calls.  I've called them the poster children for birth control, etc.  Basically a lot of nasty things that I'm sure the moderators here wouldn't appreciate me repeating - bottom line nothing nice.  I always like to close saying their parents must be real proud knowing their sons weren't man enough to get real jobs.  That usually gets a decent response.  

    Way I see it - they can't do anything to me. (Despite a threat yesterday that my life would be f'ed up)  They can threaten all they want but my credit is frozen and my bank information has changed.  I've changed the only number they could really access me directly on and I've instructed my employer and family to not answer the calls.  I just call and harass them now when I find a few extra seconds.  What's the worst they can do to me?  Charge me with harassment?  

    Nope, then they would have to identify themselves.

    Oh, and don't bother contacting Cashnet USA about the calls.  Their "fraud" department could honestly care less.  Their "investigation" is merely a means of buerocratic CYA.  I would even be surprised at this point if actual law enforcement is involved in any shape, way or form at this time.  

    There is a good chance that the information these crooks have on us was obtained from Cashnet USA - either from a database leak or from a collector that was once authorized by Cashnet to call on delinquent customers.  The other chance is they have access to Teletrack, and pulled all of our information off of there.

    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-646-274-1143/3

    For at least the last four years, possibly longer, a group has been calling former payday loan applicants advising them that they have defrauded a bank and are now being sued for non-payment of a loan.  The callers will claim to be calling on behalf of an attorney's office (name varies), the Dept. of Law and Investigation, ACS, or other similar combinations below:

    United Legal Processing Division
    Midline Marketing
    Crime Monitoring Services
    Monetary Crime Division
    U.S. National Bank
    Attorney General’s Office (usually in California)
    American Legal Services
    Affidavit Consolidation Services (ACS)

    You will be threatened with arrest, a costly trial and possibly worse.  In no shape, way or form can you be arrested for non-payment on a consumer debt.  Do not believe these threats, as they are without merit and cannot be carried out in the manner they allege.  

    Who are they?

    In the past when pressed by law enforcement for an address, the callers have provided the following information:

    David Morgan and Associates
    Morgan & Associates
    Morgan Associates
    954-727-8481
    1155 Northwest 85th Street
    Wintergarden, Florida  33150
    (Address is likely invalid)

    The collector's MO matches a once legit collections agency called Ellis Crosby & Associates.  Here are some links on them:

    http://www.budhibbs.com/collectorpages/ellis_crosby_and_associates.htm
    http://www.budhibbs.com/collectorpages/EllisCrosbyJudgment.pdf

    They have been previously fined over $1.3 million for various violations.  They have been known to use phone banks in India to make their calls, which more or less coincides with the difficult to understand accent many of us detect when we are contacted.  

    The last time this group went by any "official" name was back in 2008:

    Ellis Crosby & Associates / Douglas & Morgan Associates
    4494 Southside Boulevard Suite #200
    Jacksonville Florida 32216
    Phone:  800-928-3536 / (904) 928-3536
    (Address is likely invalid)

    There are NUMEROUS consumer alerts out against this group of individuals:

    Florida:
    http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/061107/met_176207561.shtml

    Kansas:  
    http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2010/01/ks_debt_collection.html

    Colorado:  
    http://www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov/press/ ... lls_likely_orig

    Rhode Island:  
    http://www.collectionscreditrisk.com/news/rho ... -3002135-1.html

    West Virginia:
    http://www.wvago.gov/internetloanscam.cfm

    Missouri:
    On July 15th, 2010 a Public Awareness Bulletin was sent out by Missouri Information Analysis Center.  

    "..received reports from individuals in Ohio and Illinois reference suspicious telephone calls they received. In both instances, the callers are reporting that a voicemail is received from a man, with a Middle Eastern accent, identifying himself as an officer working with the Financial Crimes Unit.  The message indicates that the reason for the call concerns a loan made by the receiver or someone in the receiver's family. The voicemail requests that a return call be made and a telephone number is provided. When a return call is made, the caller is asked to provide personal identifying information such as their date of birth and social security number.

    Reports indicate that the calls are frequent and persistent and that they even threaten arrest or legal action if information or money is not provided. It appears that the individuals making these calls may have access to some records connecting individuals and their relatives.  Missouri does not have a Financial Crimes Unit and all indications are that this is a fictitious agency. If you receive a similar phone call, please be advised that it is a scam and please contact your local law enforcement agency or the Missouri Information Analysis Center at 866-362-6422."

    Bottom line:

    Do not supply the callers with any additional information.  Inform them you have reported them to law enforcement and hang up.  If you haven't already, go ahead and report the calls to local law enforcement, your state's Attorney General and beyond.  Look up the local Secret Service branch's information in your area and get in contact with an agent there.  

    If you ever applied for a cash advance online, your information is out there.  
    Possible sources for the breach of your privacy are:

    * The scammers obtained your information from Teletrack - a reporting agency used by many cash advance lenders to determine their risk lending to you.  The service is able to tell cash advance lenders if you have existing loans with other companies, for example.  Many state laws prohibit borrowers from having more than two cash advances out at the same time.

    * The scammers created their own fake payday loan application site.  People looking for a cash advance went to the site and applied, thus freely providing the scammers with their information for malicious use at a later time.  

    * The scammers were able to get into the database(s) of cash advance lenders - probable targets being Sonic Payday and Cashnet USA.  


    How to protect yourself:

    * Inform your employer.  You are likely getting calls at home and/or at work, so make sure your employer is aware the calls are part of a scam and to not take them seriously.  Advise the callers that they are no longer allowed to call you at work.  If they continue to call, document the date and time of the calls you received.  Save voice mails left if at all possible.  

    * Change your number(s).  For some this may not be an option, for others a one-time number change can be done free of charge.

    Be advised - any references you listed on your payday loan application will be contacted.  Let those people know that this is a scam, and they can disregard.

    * Use Google Voice.  Google Voice is a great replacement voice mail system for just about any phone number you use.  Messages can be transcribed and voice mail recordings can be saved as mp3 files.  

    Pro Tip - call the scammers with a Google Voice number before turning off your old phone numbers.  Make sure when you call you identify yourself so they can start up their script.  At any point after they have your information pulled up just hang up.  They will then start religiously calling your Google Voice number.  At this point, you are free to change your regular phone number(s) and enjoy not having these people ever call you again.  (And laugh at the fact these people are basically talking to a brick wall several times a day)

    The scammers change their numbers frequently.  Law enforcement used to think it was because the callers ran out of minutes on their prepaid wireless accounts or they were shuttered due to fraud, but now they understand it's simply to evade detection by savvy consumers online.  With the proliferation of VoIP, it's even easier for the crooks to stay a couple of steps ahead of law enforcement.  Below is just a sampling of the 30+ numbers that have been used in recent memory.

    1-201-244-7722
    1-209-349-7382
    1-209-797-2212
    1-212-500-0839
    1-213-256-0408
    1-213-995-3039
    1-281-763-0433
    1-347-289-3902
    1-347-844-6817
    1-347-844-6831
    1-424-354-4270
    1-516-232-8905
    1-516-232-8935
    1-518-212-0219
    1-561-300-8018
    1-561-210-4185
    1-626-200-4646
    1-631-456-4041
    1-646-274-1143
    1-646-810-8635
    1-650-241-4604
    1-707-401-4056
    1-707-633-2789
    1-708-401-0535
    1-716-442-2824
    1-717-862-4080
    1-718-705-8669
    1-760-514-0132
    1-760-563-5384
    1-772-318-4938
    1-850-201-1111
    1-858-777-1977
    1-859-908-2281
    1-866-860-4509
    1-877-226-7488
    1-888-706-7463
    1-888-771-9249
    1-888-785-4479
    1-909-327-4870

    So can they really do anything to you?

    It's not a simple yes or no answer.  Logic dictates that, if they really wanted to take you for a ride and drain your bank accounts, they already would have.  

    So, why haven't they?  

    Authorization.  

    Why do you think you are being called so much?  Perhaps it is because they like the sound of your voice?  No, they have to have your authorization to take any form of payment from you, period.  The callers know their audience, and that audience is typically a bunch of people that have applied for payday loans in the past.  Most of those people they call couldn't afford an attorney if they wanted one, and are so used to receiving collections calls that so long as they sound like a real collector, they will likely be perceived as one.

    Furthermore, they don't even really want to talk to your attorney - that just sounds official and scary enough.  A real attorney would take the callers to task and write them off as two-bit con artists.  The callers need you, in writing, to authorize payment against the fictitious debt they claim you owe.  Go ahead, ask them for proof you owe the debt - more commonly known as verification of debt.  See what they say.  A phone authorization carries very little weight, so if they have something signed by you on file, you are done for - and the callers know that.  That authorization is the only thing these callers are doing by the book, and for good reason.  If they just went all willy nilly and made an ACH debit from your checking account, without your written approval, you could in turn report the transaction as fraudulent to your financial institution.  In about 7-10 business days, you would get the funds returned to your account.  Then the scammers would be up against a bank and their team of lawyers and investigators.  

    Bottom line:

    If you haven't paid the callers a dime, don't.  If you planned on paying them to shut them up, just don't.  Remember - you are not being contacted by a legally licensed, ethically owned and operated collector.  Read up on the FDCPA - http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/credit/cre27.pdf - and know your rights.

    PS--The FBI sent out a Press Release on this scam just last week:

    Extortion Scam Related to Delinquent Payday Loans

    Washington, D.C.
    December 07, 2010  FBI National Press Office
    (202) 324-3691

    — filed under: Press Release

    The Internet Crime Complaint Center has received many complaints from victims of payday loan telephone collection scams. Callers claim the victim is delinquent in a payday loan and must repay the loan to avoid legal consequences. The callers purport to be representatives of the FBI, Federal Legislative Department, various law firms, or other legitimate-sounding agencies. They claim to be collecting debts for companies such as United Cash Advance, U.S. Cash Advance, U.S. Cash Net, and other Internet check-cashing services.

    According to complaints received from the public, the callers have accurate data about victims, including Social Security numbers, dates of birth, addresses, employer information, bank account numbers, and the names and telephone numbers of relatives and friends. How the fraudsters obtained the personal information varies, but in some cases victims have reported they completed online applications for other loans or credit cards before the calls started.

    The fraudsters relentlessly call the victim’s home, cell phone, and place of employment. They refuse to provide any details about the alleged payday loans and become abusive when questioned. The callers have threatened victims with legal actions, arrests, and, in some cases, physical violence if they do not pay. In many cases, the callers harass victims’ relatives, friends, and employers.

    Some fraudsters have instructed victims to fax a statement agreeing to pay a certain amount, on a specific date, via a pre-paid Visa card. The statement further declares the victim will never dispute the debt.

    If you receive these calls, do not follow the caller’s instructions. Rather, you should:

    Notify your banking institutions.
    Contact the three major credit bureaus and request an alert be put on your file.
    Contact your local law enforcement agencies if you feel you are in immediate danger.
    File a complaint at www.IC3.gov.
    Tips to avoid becoming a victim of this scam:

    Never give your Social Security number—or personal information of any kind—over the telephone or online unless you initiate the contact.
    Be suspicious of any e-mail with urgent requests for personal financial information. The e-mail may include upsetting or exciting but false statements to get you to react immediately.
    Avoid filling out forms in e-mail messages that request personal information.
    Ensure that your browser is up-to-date and security patches have been applied.
    Check your bank, credit, and debit card statements regularly to make sure that there are no unauthorized transactions. If anything looks suspicious, contact your bank and all card issuers.
    When you contact companies, use numbers provided on the back of cards or statements

    http://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/paydayloanscam_120710
  • 0
    Catch em
    What I have found is that you have to push with your reporting. I didn't just got to the IC3.gove website, I called my FBI field office. I called my state Homeland Security and Secret Service Offices. I called my state police instead of my local police. And when they called, I told them this. A SS agent actually called them back on my behalf and I haven't had a call since. I have tracked numbers and reported them to the telcomm companies that own them.

    The FBI has received over 10,000 complainnts. THe officer I spoke to made calls to our regional office and then at a national level. From what he tells me, this is not being looked at as a scam anymore, but attempted extortion ring, and it is being actively investigated. The FTC is also actively investigating this and says they are VERY close to closing in on several perpetrators. There have been a number of people on these boards contacting DATELINE NBC- enough of us that they are actively researching and putting together a story....... and I encourage anyone here to do so. Please e-mail your stories to simon.doolittle@nbcuni.com. Anyone with saved messages, or especially if you have paid these scammers, Dateline wants to talk to you.

    These kinds of scams can only go on so long. Continue to post your knowledge of this scam anywhere you can!!!! There is power in numbers!

Report a phone call from 530-927-5077:

The company that called you.