7185696654

Country: USA
718 area code: New York (Bellerose, Bronx, Brooklyn)
Read comments below about 7185696654. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • 0
    Donnette
    | 1 reply
    I just received this call and was told to call 718-569-6654.  I was then read and "Affadavit" stating three seperate charges by an Office Neil Johnson of the Law and Investigation Dept., ranging from Internet Fraud to Check and Bank Fraud.  If I didn't agree to pay for this Loan then they would "Come to my place of work and bring me in."

    I have never taken a loan, nor received a loan from them and invited them to come to my work, I would be happy to see them.

    The man was very hard to understand and even gave me a case/file number.  Was very confrontational when I told him he needed to send everything to me on paper, and even said "They would see me in court".

    They were very frightening, and made me nervous
  • 0
    LAMET replies to Donnette
    PROTECT YOURSELF!  IMPORTANT INFORMATION YOU MUST READ – HOW THE SCAM WORKS AND WHAT AGENCIES TO REPORT THEM TO

    LONG RUNNING AND KNOWN SCAM – ALL OVER INTERNET AND NEWS FOR ALMOST 2 YEARS NOW

    Fake Debt Collectors – Terrorizing Consumers

    http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=5621205&page=1


    MORE ON FAKE DEBT COLLECTORS
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-904-425-9141
    http://www.thepittsburghchannel.com/call4action/17285785/detail.html
    http://www.800helpfla.com/newsletter/2008/092008.html

    http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2010/01/ks_debt_collection.html   latest release of information on this scam

    http://www.wvago.gov/internetloanscam.cfm
    Attorney General Darrell McGraw took the extraordinary step today of warning the public about a band of scam artists making threats to consumers who allegedly obtained Internet payday loans in West Virginia and across the nation. The consumers they threaten never obtained a loan at all or paid it off years ago.

    Internet payday loans are short-term loans or cash advances, usually for 14 days, made over the Internet via interactive web sites and secured by an agreement authorizing debits of the loan and all fees owed from the consumer’s checking account. These loans typically charge interest rates ranging from 600-800 APR and are unlawful in West Virginia.

    The scam artists, who speak English with a foreign accent, call themselves “U.S. National Bank,” “Federal Investigation Bureau,” “United Legal Processing” and numerous other phony names. They refuse to disclose real names and addresses and are believed to be operating “off the grid” from homes, automobiles, or from off shore locations or foreign countries, including India. Since the scammers have kept themselves purposely well hidden, thus far no law enforcement agencies have succeeded in locating or shutting them down.

    The scammers typically pose as law enforcement officers, investigators, lawyers, and bankers and threaten consumers that they will be arrested for “bank fraud” or other fictitious crimes unless money is wired immediately. They simultaneously scare and confuse consumers by using meaningless legalese gobbledygook phrases such as, “We are downloading warrants against you” or “We are filing an affidavit against you.” Consumers who don’t immediately fall for the scam are warned, “Only God can help you now.”

    The scammers almost always call consumers at work several times a day, and tell their supervisors, “Your employee has committed fraud and is about to be arrested.” Such threats have proven unsettling even to the most savvy consumers and employers who suspect the calls are fraudulent.

    Attorney General McGraw stated, “Ordinarily my office protects consumers from fraudulent activities by seeking injunctions in court. But legal action cannot be taken until the scam artists can be located. Even then, it is unlikely that the persons behind the fraudulent calls and extortionist threats would obey a court order. In this case, the consumer’s best defense is to be armed with the knowledge of the scam so that all demands for money can be resisted, despite the false but scarey threats of arrest.”

    McGraw added, “Because the fraudsters make a special point of calling consumers repeatedly at work, employers must understand that the consumers are innocent victims of a criminal enterprise and cannot stop the calls from coming. I also wish to assure the citizens of West Virginia that my office will continue to do everything possible to locate and shut down the outlaw debt collectors.”

    More information about this fraudulent debt collection scheme is available at the Attorney General’s website, www.wvago.gov/internetloanscam. Any consumers who have been threatened by these persons or wish to file a complaint about another consumer matter may do so by calling the Consumer Protection Hot Line, 1-800-368-8808, or by obtaining a complaint form from the Attorney General’s web site.

    It's a debt collection scam. And all their threats are false and illegal.
    This is a very active group of scammers, many of whom are calling from India (and probably other countries) and are in cahoots with a group of American pay day loan scammers. They attempt to extort money from consumers with a myriad of false and illegal threats, and alternately pose as debt collectors, federal and state law enforcement officers, lawyers and bankers. Their trademark is to use meaningless legalese gobblygook phrases like "We are downloading warrants against you" or "We are filing an affidavit against you." Another trademark phrase is to threaten the consumer with something like this ridiculous phrase: "If you don't pay then only God can help you."
    Typical of many financial scams of this variety, they usually demand payment via Western Union or MoneyGram or credit card. They use any number of phony names such as US National Bank, Federal Investigation Bureau, US Legal Investigation Bureau, Hopkins Law Office, United Legal Processing, Morgan Associates, United Pay Services, National Processing, White Collar Crime Unit and many more.  These criminals also use many phone numbers from many area codes; they're probably using caller-id spoofing software and/or VoIP to disguise their real location.
    The main thing to remember is that anytime someone calls you demanding money to prevent your arrest, or demanding your lawyer's name so they can sue you, it is ALWAYS a scam. No debt collector (let alone criminals posing as debt collectors) has the authority to have anyone arrested for anything. (And it's illegal to them to threaten such a thing.) And since these foreign dirtbags routinely impersonate law enforcement, it's also important to remember that American law enforcement officers aren't in the business of debt collection.  (Debt is a civil, not a criminal, matter.)
    The bottom line is, these are criminals trying to steal your money.
    A consumer posting a complaint about these same scammers at https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-718-831-7157 notes that 718-831-7157 is associated with an India-based "outsourcing" telephone bank.  Though a reverse search on WhitePages.com shows that 718-831-7157 is an unlisted land line in New York City, information on Debtbuyers.Com shows that that number is used by India-based Intellisourze. (Source: http://www.debtbuyers.com/debtbuyers.asp ) My guess is that it's a VoIP phone number.
    This is another piece of the puzzle that fits in perfectly with other information about this scam. There are some reports on 800Notes that have suggested that the crooks behind this offshore scam are also the crooks behind the notorious Bass/Ellis Crosby & Assoc./States Predisposition scams in Florida and Georgia. The interesting thing is that the number of complaints on here about the US National Bank/US Legal Investigation/Federal Investigation scam skyrocketed *after* April 7, 2008 when Florida obtained a $1.3 million judgment against Ted Ellis Crosby, shutdown his operations and barred him from ever conducting debt collections in Florida (Read http://myfloridalegal.com/newsrel.nsf/newsrel ... 5257424005858A6 ) There's certainly a good chance that the crooks placing these calls from India are doing so on behalf of the American crooks behind the Crosby/Bass/States Predisposition scams.
    Here's the contact information for the phone bank in India:
    IntellisOurzE BPO
    701, Sapphier, Nr. Cargo Motors,
    C.G. Road Navrangpura,
    Ahmedabad - 9. (Guj.) INDIA.
    E-Mail: info@intellisourze.com
    Website: www.intellisourze.com 
    A check on the domain name "intellisourze.com" shows that the website and name registration was created on May 8, just one month *after* the Crosby scams were shut down in Florida:
    Domain Name: INTELLISOURZE.COM
    Registrant:  Pragra Infratech Pvt. Limited.
    Email:  ankur.ranpariya@pragra.com  
    908, Aksaht Tower, Nr. ICICI Bank
    Opp. Rajpath Club, S.G. Highway
    Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India 380054
    Tel. +91.7926871353
    Creation Date: 08-May-2008
    Expiration Date: 08-May-2009
    Domain servers in listed order: ns5.znetindia.com ns4.znetindia.com
    (Source: http://whois.domaintools.com/intellisourze.com )
    Though scam calls from these crooks have been going on long before May 8, the frequency of complaints about these calls increased considerably after Crosby was shut down in early April.
    This is conjecture, but appearances suggest that Crosby and company were originally running a two-pronged payday loan scam operation -- with some calls being made from Jacksonville, Florida and other calls being made from a phone bank in India (and possibly other countries); then, after the Florida Attorney General shut down the Crosby scams in Florida, the Crosby crooks transferred most of their scam efforts to the India phone bank.

    If you are targeted by these criminals, be sure to report them to all the following federal and state law enforcement agencies (most of which you can do online or over the phone):
    1.    The U.S. Secret Service is responsible for protecting the country's financial infrastructure and payment systems from international and domestic threats. Call or write your local Secret Service field office to alert them to the details of this attempted extortion. The addresses and phone numbers for the local Secret Service field offices are listed at http://www.secretservice.gov/field_offices.shtml or in your phone book.
    2.    Alert the FBI at https://tips.fbi.gov Be sure to tell the FBI that you are being targeted by extortionists over the phone. And if the crooks claim to be law enforcement or lawyers, officers of the court or bankers, be sure to include that information in your report.
    3.    File a complaint with your local police. Most police departments will take a report over the phone.  Be sure to tell them that you're being targeted by an extortionist and give them all the details.
    4.    File a complaint your state's attorney general, the contact information for whom is at www.wvago.gov
    5.    File a complaint online with The Federal Trade Commission at https://www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov/FTC_Wizard.aspx?Lang=en
    If these crooks call back, promise them nothing, pay them nothing and tell them nothing other than that you know they're a scam and that you've reported them to law enforcement. (And be sure to report them to all the agencies above each time they call you.)

    By the way, here's just a small sample of numbers used by this particular group of scammers. Read the reports and you'll see the same pattern time and again -- phony organization names, thick foreign accents, and oddly worded threats that are so melodramatic and ridiculous that it's laughable:

    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-925-262-1327
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-678-954-6346
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-341-4004
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-856-831-0640
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-949-743-1140
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-410-505-8128
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-917-464-2534
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-210-858-6602
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-775-2121
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-949-743-1156
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-214-245-1402
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-214-245-0922
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-214-723-5572
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-904-425-2863
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-718-831-7157
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-904-425-2857
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-858-244-0444
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-954-678-9724
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-610-571-3252
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-310-909-8245
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-310-499-9983
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-771-9249   Scammer posting here as GARY and GARRY JONES
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-866-860-4509   Scammer posting here as Mike Henderson
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-212-500-0839   Scammer posting here as Ricky
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-201-244-7722   Scammer posting as Carole, David Brown and Amanda
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-626-200-4646   Scammer placing false postings at this new number as silshan kanniue and Tina – preparing a new number to use.
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-424-354-4270   Scammer placing false postings as Rose
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-785-4479   Scammer posting as Robert
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-909-327-4870   Scammer placing false postings as Marry
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-646-274-1143   Scammer placing false postings as Karen Miller


    Scam alert: Bogus debt collectors
    By Leslie McFadden • Bankrate.com
    Monday, Aug. 3
    Posted 2 p.m.
    Bankrate reporter Leslie McFadden contributed this entry.
    This scam isn't technically about credit cards, but it is scary enough to post a warning. The Better Business Bureau issued an alert today saying consumers across the country are getting phone calls from bogus debt collectors claiming default on a payday loan. Of course, the consumer needs to pay a large fee to avoid arrest -- as much as $1,000.
    The caller poses as a lawyer, and may threaten extradition to face trial if the consumer doesn't pay up immediately.
    What makes these calls alarming -- and perhaps convincing -- is that the perpetrators reference the consumer's personal information, such as the person's Social Security number, driver's license number, previous bank account numbers, home address -- even personal references.
    "The amount of information they have is really troubling," says BBB spokeswoman Alison Southwick. She adds that the amount of data points to a possible security breach.
    Spread the word to your friends and family: Don't give out personal or financial information to an unknown caller. Scammers can spoof Caller ID to display different numbers, so trust your instincts over technology.
    The BBB offers these tips:
    •    Ask the debt collector to provide official documentation which substantiates the debt.
    •    Do not provide or confirm any bank account, credit card or other personal information over the phone until you have confirmed the legitimacy of the call.
    •    File a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission online if the caller is abusive, uses threats or otherwise violates federal telemarketing laws or the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
    •    File a complaint with the Better Business Bureau online if you believe a debt collector is trying to scam you.
  • 0
    LAMET replies to susette griffin
    SO REPORT THEM

    PROTECT YOURSELF!  IMPORTANT INFORMATION YOU MUST READ – HOW THE SCAM WORKS AND WHAT AGENCIES TO REPORT THEM TO

    LONG RUNNING AND KNOWN SCAM – ALL OVER INTERNET AND NEWS FOR ALMOST 2 YEARS NOW

    Fake Debt Collectors – Terrorizing Consumers

    http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=5621205&page=1


    MORE ON FAKE DEBT COLLECTORS
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-904-425-9141
    http://www.thepittsburghchannel.com/call4action/17285785/detail.html
    http://www.800helpfla.com/newsletter/2008/092008.html

    http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2010/01/ks_debt_collection.html   latest release of information on this scam

    http://www.wvago.gov/internetloanscam.cfm
    Attorney General Darrell McGraw took the extraordinary step today of warning the public about a band of scam artists making threats to consumers who allegedly obtained Internet payday loans in West Virginia and across the nation. The consumers they threaten never obtained a loan at all or paid it off years ago.

    Internet payday loans are short-term loans or cash advances, usually for 14 days, made over the Internet via interactive web sites and secured by an agreement authorizing debits of the loan and all fees owed from the consumer’s checking account. These loans typically charge interest rates ranging from 600-800 APR and are unlawful in West Virginia.

    The scam artists, who speak English with a foreign accent, call themselves “U.S. National Bank,” “Federal Investigation Bureau,” “United Legal Processing” and numerous other phony names. They refuse to disclose real names and addresses and are believed to be operating “off the grid” from homes, automobiles, or from off shore locations or foreign countries, including India. Since the scammers have kept themselves purposely well hidden, thus far no law enforcement agencies have succeeded in locating or shutting them down.

    The scammers typically pose as law enforcement officers, investigators, lawyers, and bankers and threaten consumers that they will be arrested for “bank fraud” or other fictitious crimes unless money is wired immediately. They simultaneously scare and confuse consumers by using meaningless legalese gobbledygook phrases such as, “We are downloading warrants against you” or “We are filing an affidavit against you.” Consumers who don’t immediately fall for the scam are warned, “Only God can help you now.”

    The scammers almost always call consumers at work several times a day, and tell their supervisors, “Your employee has committed fraud and is about to be arrested.” Such threats have proven unsettling even to the most savvy consumers and employers who suspect the calls are fraudulent.

    Attorney General McGraw stated, “Ordinarily my office protects consumers from fraudulent activities by seeking injunctions in court. But legal action cannot be taken until the scam artists can be located. Even then, it is unlikely that the persons behind the fraudulent calls and extortionist threats would obey a court order. In this case, the consumer’s best defense is to be armed with the knowledge of the scam so that all demands for money can be resisted, despite the false but scarey threats of arrest.”

    McGraw added, “Because the fraudsters make a special point of calling consumers repeatedly at work, employers must understand that the consumers are innocent victims of a criminal enterprise and cannot stop the calls from coming. I also wish to assure the citizens of West Virginia that my office will continue to do everything possible to locate and shut down the outlaw debt collectors.”

    More information about this fraudulent debt collection scheme is available at the Attorney General’s website, www.wvago.gov/internetloanscam. Any consumers who have been threatened by these persons or wish to file a complaint about another consumer matter may do so by calling the Consumer Protection Hot Line, 1-800-368-8808, or by obtaining a complaint form from the Attorney General’s web site.

    It's a debt collection scam. And all their threats are false and illegal.
    This is a very active group of scammers, many of whom are calling from India (and probably other countries) and are in cahoots with a group of American pay day loan scammers. They attempt to extort money from consumers with a myriad of false and illegal threats, and alternately pose as debt collectors, federal and state law enforcement officers, lawyers and bankers. Their trademark is to use meaningless legalese gobblygook phrases like "We are downloading warrants against you" or "We are filing an affidavit against you." Another trademark phrase is to threaten the consumer with something like this ridiculous phrase: "If you don't pay then only God can help you."
    Typical of many financial scams of this variety, they usually demand payment via Western Union or MoneyGram or credit card. They use any number of phony names such as US National Bank, Federal Investigation Bureau, US Legal Investigation Bureau, Hopkins Law Office, United Legal Processing, Morgan Associates, United Pay Services, National Processing, White Collar Crime Unit and many more.  These criminals also use many phone numbers from many area codes; they're probably using caller-id spoofing software and/or VoIP to disguise their real location.
    The main thing to remember is that anytime someone calls you demanding money to prevent your arrest, or demanding your lawyer's name so they can sue you, it is ALWAYS a scam. No debt collector (let alone criminals posing as debt collectors) has the authority to have anyone arrested for anything. (And it's illegal to them to threaten such a thing.) And since these foreign dirtbags routinely impersonate law enforcement, it's also important to remember that American law enforcement officers aren't in the business of debt collection.  (Debt is a civil, not a criminal, matter.)
    The bottom line is, these are criminals trying to steal your money.
    A consumer posting a complaint about these same scammers at https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-718-831-7157 notes that 718-831-7157 is associated with an India-based "outsourcing" telephone bank.  Though a reverse search on WhitePages.com shows that 718-831-7157 is an unlisted land line in New York City, information on Debtbuyers.Com shows that that number is used by India-based Intellisourze. (Source: http://www.debtbuyers.com/debtbuyers.asp ) My guess is that it's a VoIP phone number.
    This is another piece of the puzzle that fits in perfectly with other information about this scam. There are some reports on 800Notes that have suggested that the crooks behind this offshore scam are also the crooks behind the notorious Bass/Ellis Crosby & Assoc./States Predisposition scams in Florida and Georgia. The interesting thing is that the number of complaints on here about the US National Bank/US Legal Investigation/Federal Investigation scam skyrocketed *after* April 7, 2008 when Florida obtained a $1.3 million judgment against Ted Ellis Crosby, shutdown his operations and barred him from ever conducting debt collections in Florida (Read http://myfloridalegal.com/newsrel.nsf/newsrel ... 5257424005858A6 ) There's certainly a good chance that the crooks placing these calls from India are doing so on behalf of the American crooks behind the Crosby/Bass/States Predisposition scams.
    Here's the contact information for the phone bank in India:
    IntellisOurzE BPO
    701, Sapphier, Nr. Cargo Motors,
    C.G. Road Navrangpura,
    Ahmedabad - 9. (Guj.) INDIA.
    E-Mail: info@intellisourze.com
    Website: www.intellisourze.com 
    A check on the domain name "intellisourze.com" shows that the website and name registration was created on May 8, just one month *after* the Crosby scams were shut down in Florida:
    Domain Name: INTELLISOURZE.COM
    Registrant:  Pragra Infratech Pvt. Limited.
    Email:  ankur.ranpariya@pragra.com  
    908, Aksaht Tower, Nr. ICICI Bank
    Opp. Rajpath Club, S.G. Highway
    Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India 380054
    Tel. +91.7926871353
    Creation Date: 08-May-2008
    Expiration Date: 08-May-2009
    Domain servers in listed order: ns5.znetindia.com ns4.znetindia.com
    (Source: http://whois.domaintools.com/intellisourze.com )
    Though scam calls from these crooks have been going on long before May 8, the frequency of complaints about these calls increased considerably after Crosby was shut down in early April.
    This is conjecture, but appearances suggest that Crosby and company were originally running a two-pronged payday loan scam operation -- with some calls being made from Jacksonville, Florida and other calls being made from a phone bank in India (and possibly other countries); then, after the Florida Attorney General shut down the Crosby scams in Florida, the Crosby crooks transferred most of their scam efforts to the India phone bank.

    If you are targeted by these criminals, be sure to report them to all the following federal and state law enforcement agencies (most of which you can do online or over the phone):
    1.    The U.S. Secret Service is responsible for protecting the country's financial infrastructure and payment systems from international and domestic threats. Call or write your local Secret Service field office to alert them to the details of this attempted extortion. The addresses and phone numbers for the local Secret Service field offices are listed at http://www.secretservice.gov/field_offices.shtml or in your phone book.
    2.    Alert the FBI at https://tips.fbi.gov Be sure to tell the FBI that you are being targeted by extortionists over the phone. And if the crooks claim to be law enforcement or lawyers, officers of the court or bankers, be sure to include that information in your report.
    3.    File a complaint with your local police. Most police departments will take a report over the phone.  Be sure to tell them that you're being targeted by an extortionist and give them all the details.
    4.    File a complaint your state's attorney general, the contact information for whom is at www.wvago.gov
    5.    File a complaint online with The Federal Trade Commission at https://www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov/FTC_Wizard.aspx?Lang=en
    If these crooks call back, promise them nothing, pay them nothing and tell them nothing other than that you know they're a scam and that you've reported them to law enforcement. (And be sure to report them to all the agencies above each time they call you.)

    By the way, here's just a small sample of numbers used by this particular group of scammers. Read the reports and you'll see the same pattern time and again -- phony organization names, thick foreign accents, and oddly worded threats that are so melodramatic and ridiculous that it's laughable:

    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-925-262-1327
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-678-954-6346
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-341-4004
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-856-831-0640
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-949-743-1140
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-410-505-8128
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-917-464-2534
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-210-858-6602
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-775-2121
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-949-743-1156
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-214-245-1402
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-214-245-0922
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-214-723-5572
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-904-425-2863
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-718-831-7157
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-904-425-2857
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-858-244-0444
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-954-678-9724
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-610-571-3252
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-310-909-8245
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-310-499-9983
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-771-9249   Scammer posting here as GARY and GARRY JONES
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-866-860-4509   Scammer posting here as Mike Henderson
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-212-500-0839   Scammer posting here as Ricky
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-201-244-7722   Scammer posting as Carole, David Brown and Amanda
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-626-200-4646   Scammer placing false postings at this new number as silshan kanniue and Tina – preparing a new number to use.
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-424-354-4270   Scammer placing false postings as Rose
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-888-785-4479   Scammer posting as Robert
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-909-327-4870   Scammer placing false postings as Marry
    https://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-646-274-1143   Scammer placing false postings as Karen Miller


    Scam alert: Bogus debt collectors
    By Leslie McFadden • Bankrate.com
    Monday, Aug. 3
    Posted 2 p.m.
    Bankrate reporter Leslie McFadden contributed this entry.
    This scam isn't technically about credit cards, but it is scary enough to post a warning. The Better Business Bureau issued an alert today saying consumers across the country are getting phone calls from bogus debt collectors claiming default on a payday loan. Of course, the consumer needs to pay a large fee to avoid arrest -- as much as $1,000.
    The caller poses as a lawyer, and may threaten extradition to face trial if the consumer doesn't pay up immediately.
    What makes these calls alarming -- and perhaps convincing -- is that the perpetrators reference the consumer's personal information, such as the person's Social Security number, driver's license number, previous bank account numbers, home address -- even personal references.
    "The amount of information they have is really troubling," says BBB spokeswoman Alison Southwick. She adds that the amount of data points to a possible security breach.
    Spread the word to your friends and family: Don't give out personal or financial information to an unknown caller. Scammers can spoof Caller ID to display different numbers, so trust your instincts over technology.
    The BBB offers these tips:
    •    Ask the debt collector to provide official documentation which substantiates the debt.
    •    Do not provide or confirm any bank account, credit card or other personal information over the phone until you have confirmed the legitimacy of the call.
    •    File a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission online if the caller is abusive, uses threats or otherwise violates federal telemarketing laws or the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
    •    File a complaint with the Better Business Bureau online if you believe a debt collector is trying to scam you.
  • 0
    Ari
    I am in a lawsuit with this company the FBI told me they are frauds don't give them anything
  • 0
    Ari replies to judy
    he said he was the FBI! Don't worry I spoke to the FBI about these pricks.
  • 0
    Angry Employer
    I have recieved several calls from "Austin Jones" regarding one of my employees.  In order to stop these calls I asked if I could take a message.  At that point, "Mr. Jones" informed me he was with the "Depatment of Law and Investigations".  Sensing something was amiss I asked what city the department was based out of.  "Mr. Jones" replied that he did not believe I had a right to that information.  Being a little more than frustrated I stated that my guess was somwhere near Bombay.  It was at this point when the callers true colors shined.  After calling me a mother f***er he asked me if I would like five fingers in my a** then went on to tell me that he would put his d*** in my a**.  I know this seems unbelievable but it is totally true.  These dirtbags are running a total scam and should be dealt with accordingly.  Since then I have continually called 718-569-6654 posing as United Turbin Repair, a goat salesman and whatever my coworkers and I can come up with.  I suggest you do the same in your free time.  Not only is it satisfying to know that during the conversation they are losing valuable time to screw some other unsuspecting American it's absolutely side splitting to hear these morons when they are provoked.
    • Caller: Department of law and Investigations
    • Call type: Debt collector
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    Angry Employer
    I have recieved several calls from "Austin Jones" regarding one of my employees.  In order to stop these calls I asked if I could take a message.  At that point, "Mr. Jones" informed me he was with the "Depatment of Law and Investigations".  Sensing something was amiss I asked what city the department was based out of.  "Mr. Jones" replied that he did not believe I had a right to that information.  Being a little more than frustrated I stated that my guess was somwhere near Bombay.  It was at this point when the callers true colors shined.  After calling me a mother f***er he asked me if I would like five fingers in my a** then went on to tell me that he would put his d*** in my a**.  I know this seems unbelievable but it is totally true.  These dirtbags are running a total scam and should be dealt with accordingly.  Since then I have continually called 718-569-6654 posing as United Turbin Repair, a goat salesman and whatever my coworkers and I can come up with.  I suggest you do the same in your free time.  Not only is it satisfying to know that during the conversation they are losing valuable time to screw some other unsuspecting American it's absolutely side splitting to hear these morons when they are provoked.
    • Caller: Department of law and Investigations
    • Call type: Debt collector
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    Angry Employer
    I have recieved several calls from "Austin Jones" regarding one of my employees.  In order to stop these calls I asked if I could take a message.  At that point, "Mr. Jones" informed me he was with the "Depatment of Law and Investigations".  Sensing something was amiss I asked what city the department was based out of.  "Mr. Jones" replied that he did not believe I had a right to that information.  Being a little more than frustrated I stated that my guess was somwhere near Bombay.  It was at this point when the callers true colors shined.  After calling me a mother f***er he asked me if I would like five fingers in my a** then went on to tell me that he would put his d*** in my a**.  I know this seems unbelievable but it is totally true.  These dirtbags are running a total scam and should be dealt with accordingly.  Since then I have continually called 718-569-6654 posing as United Turbin Repair, a goat salesman and whatever my coworkers and I can come up with.  I suggest you do the same in your free time.  Not only is it satisfying to know that during the conversation they are losing valuable time to screw some other unsuspecting American it's absolutely side splitting to hear these morons when they are provoked.
    • Caller: Dept. Law and Investigations
    • Call type: Debt collector
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    Angry Employer
    Sorry for posting 3 times.  didn't know it had gone through
    • Caller: angry indians
    • Call type: Debt collector
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    SAMI
    I received a message from this #. They told me I needed to call them back. The man that left a message had a very strong middle earstern accent. He told me to call him back or else. I called him back and he told me that I applied for a loan on the internet that I did not pay back. They had my social security #, home address, and the name of both my siblings. I was scared. I know I did not apply for a loan. When I told them I would not send money for loan I did not do he cused at me and threatened me. My husband called the number back they did the same. I have told everyone I know about this. PLEASE DON"T SEND THEM MONEY. I was told by the local police department and they told me to report this to the FBI. I did. Now I have had to change my Social Security # and my bank information. I hope none of you are called. But if you are. Please report to the FBI. We need to put an stop to this. Thanks,
    • Caller: CASHNETMARKETING
    • Call type: Debt collector
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    ruth
    woman with foreign accent called and said her company had a buyer for our timeshare.  all i had to do was send them 1,800 dollars for "legal fees". they have continued to call with offers. they say they are calling for  NY Financial Recovery.   have tried to find this company on the internet   their web page a 5 yr. old could have made.  BEWARE of this scam.
    • Caller: NY Financial Recovery
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    amy
    had a phone call that they were with New York Financial.  wanted to finance a time share.  i asked why thier number was unlisted. they weren't sure. asked for their website.  i looked it up as we spoke. there indeed was a website with an address i searched address and there was no such address it didn't exist.  i asked "Sal" how come their address was non-existant he said he would call his ITT guy and call me back??? haven't heard back
    • Caller: New York Financial
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    the hauss
    these people are loosers telling me they sold my time share to some one in texas
    • Caller: new york finacial
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    the hauss
    i love to call them an [***] with them they just dont get it these [***]
    • Caller: new york finacial [***]
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    the hauss
    well ladies and gentlemen i put that phone number to bed tonight i just kept calling them a [***] with them now i call its disconected lol lol lol lol these [***] [***]
    • Caller: [***]
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    Ben Mitchell replies to kyle
    The same Robin Miller called me saying I owed him 389.00, He said and acted like every call I've read complaining about a robin miller.  He has to be in India getting payed 3 dollars an hour to gain social security numbers and drivers licence information..I'm gonna pay them off at 20 a month..
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    Jennifer27
    I recieved this phone call from a foreign man, stating he was calling over a very important legal matter.  He was going on and on about this money I owed, then at the of the phone CALLS he said "If I don't here from you or your legal team he doesn't know what will happen that he hopes to hear if not I will see the situation unfold around me!!!! he called my home number and, my husbands cell number, both times he stated this.  I found this kinda threatning (What situation is going to unfold around me)?????
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    Cuppidd
    I just received a call from this looser and I just hung up. I live in Canada and I don't know anyone in New York. Remember never to press any of the buttons or follow the prompts. The loosers are trying to get info from you and make a mess of your life
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    Malcolm
    (718)569-5344 first an electronic voice comes on and annunciate and generate my name by spilling it out. then a woman with potencies  colonial accent call herself Killy Smith wants to speak with me . she has called a few times and out of 8 generated calls only 2 was successful  . her computer miss-fired and i only know that because i see her number on my caller ID box.
    I have been receiving calls from(718) 569-5344
    • Call type: Non-profit organization
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    Billy Bob replies to Beth
    Unfortunately since they are foreign, the Attorney General can do nothing but warn consumers.  That's about the only thing you can do other than not answering the phone.  Sites like these are good because people can instantly confirm someone is trying to scam them.

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