412-218-3673

Country: USA
412 area code: Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh)
Read comments below about 4122183673. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • -1
    Sick 'n Tired
    Called just before the dinner hour.  Caller ID listed "Carnegie, PA." Left no message.  . . . Just another crap call.
    • Caller: Carnegie, PA
  • -1
    Sick 'n Tired Too
    Caller ID listed "Carnegie, PA." Left no message.   SPAM Call I suspect
    • Call type: Telemarketer
  • +1
    confused
    indian guy calling on behalf of West Penn Power, but my bill is caught up.
  • -1
    Anonym
    Keeps calling and it is just some phony call
  • -1
    Phone Abuse!!
    | 1 reply
    Every day, on and on. I pay for a privilege and they abuse it constantly. Something REALLY should be done about it. They ARE NOT PAYING my phone bills. I HATE ADVERTISING!!!!!! Stay out of my face.
    • Caller: ID says Carnegie PA
    • Call type: Telemarketer
  • -1
    Phone Abuse Again replies to Phone Abuse!!
    I press * 57 each time they call to report it.
  • +1
    Meow
    This is someone calling about an energy efficiency kit. They keep calling me again and again....
    • Caller: Energy Efficiency
    • Call type: Telemarketer
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  • +1
    Theresa
    | 2 replies
    Told me to call a 1-800 number.  They have documents to deliver.  Some kind of legal issue.  They called my number, my work number, my daughters’ numbers.  How they got all the phone numbers, I don’t know.
    • Caller: Unknown
  • +2
    BigA replies to Theresa
    | 1 reply
    Quote:
    How they got all the phone numbers, I don’t know.
    It is called the Internet.

    One of the tricks they use is to call your family, friends, neighbors and/or places of employment (past or present or both) to create panic and embarrassment so that their intended victim calls them so that they can scare that person into paying extortion money.  They will usually also state information that would be illegal for a real debt collector to state to department and tell them that you are a deadbeat who does not pay their bills. They often call people that have never even been a third party such as that you are being sued, that you owe money to someone, etc. They threaten that if you do not call them back, they will contact your HR associated with you because they get erroneous information off the internet.

    The fake process server/location finder extortion SCAM usually consists of the following:

    They mention that they have received a Fax document or some sort of complaint and that there is a pending legal matter or action about to filed against you to create the sense of urgency. They tell you that they are a “process server” and cannot give you the particulars of the case since the file is sealed. This is simply ruse to get you to call another number (often with a made-up case number) where they will ask for money to “make it go away” (this is actually the same place, they work in teams, one pretending to be the server, and the other usually pretends to be a lawyer). They threaten to serve you at home or at work. They tell you that if they serve you at work then they will need a supervisor, security, or HR person there as a witness, hoping that will cause you to panic over the alleged embarrassment of being served at work. They also tell you that you will need two forms of ID. None of which is true. Process servers do not ever call ahead so that you can dodge them. Process servers get paid to serve papers, nothing else. They certainly are not going to pass up a paycheck by telling you that you can avoid being served, they are not going to give you an extra day or even a few hours to get a “stop order”. Court documents are time sensitive and must be served within a certain amount of time. Remember that you can always call the local courthouse to see if there really is a lawsuit that has been filed against you.

    It is incumbent upon them under the law to prove that the debt exists and that you owe it, and (this is the important part) that they have the legal right to collect it. You are not obligated under the law to prove that you don’t owe or that it is paid.

    Federal law (FDCPA) requires them to send you a letter, email, or text (postmarked in the case of a letter) within 5 days of their first contact that contains their name, physical address, the creditor’s name, and the amount of the alleged debt. Unless they have communicated it to you verbally at the beginning of your conversation. It also must contain the “mini-Miranda” telling you that it is an attempt to collect a debt and that all information will be used for those purposes. The one other important thing that this communication must also have in it is that you have a right to dispute the debt within 30 days of receipt of the letter and if you do so, all collection activity must be stopped until the debt is verified. If and when you get that communication you should immediately send that debt validation letter by certified, return receipt mail.

    First, you should make a complaint at this Federal Agency, and while there you should also read up on how debt collection is supposed to work as well as what your rights in this matter are: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/

    Also file a complaint with your State Attorney General's office.
    List of State AG’s offices: https://800notes.com/faq/attorney-general
  • +2
    Theresa replies to BigA
    Thank you Big A for all the information.  I appreciate it!

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