917-503-8517

Country: USA
917 area code: New York (New York City)
Read comments below about 9175038517. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • +1
    TravelPro
    | 2 replies
    Got a call this morning. Said I had committed tax fraud and that they were the IRS. They told me before I hung up that I had 24 hours to have my lawyer call them back. Total scam. I'm pretty certain the IRS would....first send me a letter, and second call me by name!  
  • 0
    sameasyou replies to TravelPro
    | 1 reply
    Same message here.
  • 0
    ann onamous
    Agressive IRS scam clainimg we owe back taxes and they are proescuting
    • Caller: IRS
    • Call type: Prank
  • 0
    Metoo
    Same here
  • +1
    Tamianth replies to sameasyou
    http://www.irs.gov/uac/Tax-Scams-Consumer-Alerts
    https://800notes.com/forum/ta-8c2f64bf2b91fa5/irs-warns-of-telephone-scam

    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 $50.00 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.
  • +1
    Ariella
    Called me saying they were from "Tax crimes". I don't think I would've committed a tax crime seeing as I am only 16. Told me I had a few hours to call my attorney or the case would do something. I just hung up.
  • +1
    bob
    | 1 reply
    yea same here. they were going to put a lean on my property unless I paid them. I told them sue me then....
  • +1
    Alfalfa replies to bob
    Good for you!

    This is (one of many) criminal extortion scams that have exploded over the past decade correlating with advances in technology, which makes it easy for criminals to scare people into thinking something terrible will happen to them if they don't cave in to their demands. The IRS has been well aware of this scam for well over a year, but because the calls are originating in overseas boiler rooms with the criminals using computers to alter their identities and locations, they are next to impossible to trace. Making matters worse is the fact they are operating out of reach of US law enforcement and in apathetic and corrupt countries who could basically care less what these people do to us. The next time they call, let them know you are aware they are running an extortion scam, have no intention of paying them anything and have alerted 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/

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