7135812064

Country: USA
713 area code: Texas (Houston, Pasadena)
Read comments below about 7135812064. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • 0
    Tamianth replies to Maggie
    http://www.irs.gov/uac/Tax-Scams-Consumer-Alerts
    http://www.treasury.gov/tigta/contact_report.shtml
    https://800notes.com/forum/ta-8c2f64bf2b91fa5/irs-warns-of-telephone-scam

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/prosecutor ... s-scam-32296852

    Report the Calls to the real IRS here:
    •report the incident to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration at 800-366-4484.
    •You can also file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission at FTC.gov. Add "IRS Telephone Scam" to the comments in your complaint.

    ******
    Do consider getting a call blocking device or phone.. You can google them and many are around $40.00 or so.If its a cell phone, some already have call blocking, if not, there are free apps on the web that will work for some. You can google this. If you have a smart phone, there is a free app called call control. Iphones appear to have apps also. Another one is called Mr. Number.

    For tracfone & straight talk:

    https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.privacystar.android.tracfone&hl=en
    http://extras.straighttalk.com/en
    http://www.youmail.com/home/carriers/straight-talk/block-number
    https://www.straighttalkwirelessforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=6803&t=55006
  • 0
    DADDY replies to A.M.
    [***] YOU ASSSSSHOLE....
  • 0
    Karin
    There was a message left on my machine by a man with an Indian accent, claiming there was a warrant out for my arrest in Washington DC. Last time I was in DC was for my 8th grade class Washington trip. I was asked to call back and ask for officer Jason Miller at 713-581-2064 ASAP before the warrant will be sent to my home state of New York. Of course I did back.
    • Caller: Washington DC Crime Dept.
  • 0
    Karin
    * sorry messed up my last sentence. Of course I did not call back.
    • Caller: Washington DC Crime Dept.
  • 0
    Claudia replies to Alex
    HI! I just received the same message, the only difference is that he said his name was Mike Connor.  What concerns me is that he had my husband's first and last name!  Did you report it? if so, where? did he continue to call?
    thanks!
  • 0
    jaggy2 replies to Unhappy Consumer
    My wife got a very similar call Friday afternoon before the Labor Day holiday from a man with an east indian accent, who said his name was Kevin James and was an IRS officer calling from Houston, TX. He gave the above number, which is a Houston, Texas phone number that didn't show up on our caller ID . When I kept asking questions about the caller's bonafides, he terminated the call. Shortly thereafter I got another call from a man who said his name was Mark Hanna from "the Massachusetts Police Department." When I questioned his bona fides, he threatened to have me arrested. When I said "come on down," he called me an "[***]" and hung up. My wife's tax lawyer's office said this was all a scam and not to deal with them. My local lawyer concurred.
  • 0
    Yajaira replies to Alex
    Omg! When I got the call he was officer Kevin James. With the same bull. Saying he was calling from the Crime Division Headquarters  in Washington DC. My address in under federal investigation. But they were willing to talk to me before they issue a warrant for my arrest. I called back to bust on his chops but the # was convinently disconnected. 😄unbelievable.
  • 0
    Off. Mike Connor
    [***] you asssholes
    • Caller: CID`
    • Call type: Political call
  • 0
    Alfalfa
    These are criminal extortionists operating in overseas boiler rooms using VOIP to alter their identities and locations and out of the reach of US law enforcement.

    If someone calls saying he's an IRS agent and demands that you send money immediately, hang up.
    It's a phone scam.In fact, it tops the IRS "Dirty Dozen" list of tax scams this year, and it's been surging in recent months, the agency said Thursday.

    The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA), which oversees the IRS, has received reports of 290,000 scam calls since October 2013 and said nearly 3,000 victims have been swindled out of $14 million so far.

    By altering their caller ID number to make it look like they're calling from an IRS office, these scammers often threaten vulnerable people like the elderly and new immigrants with things like arrest, deportation or the loss of their driver's license if they don't pay immediately for money purportedly owed.

    Often leaving messages that say it's "urgent" you call them back, the scammers use common names and sometimes say they are from the IRS Criminal Division. They may even claim to know the last four digits of your Social Security number and send follow-up emails that appear to be from the IRS, TIGTA said.

    They often demand that payments be made by prepaid debit card.

    Once they make their threats, the scammers have been known to call back and again disguise their caller ID so it appears they are calling from the police department or the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV).

    Or sometimes when they call, they may say you have a refund due and ask you to provide personal information so you can claim it.

    The real IRS will usually contact you by regular mail first, if it needs to contact you at all. And the agency never demands immediate payment by phone or asks for credit card or debit numbers if they do call. It also never asks for personal or financial information by email, text or social media.

    If you get what you suspect is a scam call, report it to TIGTA through its Web site or call 800-366-4484.

    http://money.cnn.com/2015/01/22/pf/taxes/irs-tax-scams/

Report a phone call from 713-581-2064:

The company that called you.