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  • WWL-AMFM

    Feds warn someone’s impersonating Marshals, threatening to jail people

    By Dave Cohen,

    4 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2ZyCdP_0vLAA4Ue00

    Federal authorities in New Orleans are warning people about a scam where people get a call from what appears to be the U.S. Marshals Service for the Eastern District of Louisiana.

    “Our office has received numerous inquiries about phone calls from the U.S. Marshals seeking mandatory payment or go to jail,” U.S. Marshal Enix Smith said, “I want the public to know that these calls are scams!  I urge you to verify the court order given by the caller by simply contacting the U.S. District Court Clerk’s Office in your area.”

    Officials say con artists are spoofing the district office’s real number to trick people into sending them payments.

    A news release says, “The U.S. Marshals are urging people to report the calls to their local FBI office… and file a consumer complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, which has the ability to detect patterns of fraud from the information collected and share that data with law enforcement.”

    Authorities say that during these calls, scammers attempt to collect a fine in lieu of arrest for failing to report for jury duty or other offenses.

    “They then tell victims they can avoid arrest by sending money or by purchasing a prepaid debit card or gift card and read the card number over the phone to satisfy the fine.  Scammers use many different tactics to sound credible. They sometimes provide information like badge numbers, names of actual law enforcement officials and federal judges, and courthouse addresses.”

    The feds issued a list of things to remember:
    -U.S. Marshals will never ask for credit/debit card/gift card numbers, wire transfers, or bank routing numbers for any purpose.
    -Don’t divulge personal or financial information to unknown callers.
    -Report scam phone calls to your local FBI office and to the FTC .
    -You can remain anonymous when you report.
    -If scammer provides a court order, authenticate the call by calling the clerk of the court’s office of the U.S. District Court in your area and verify the court order given by the caller.

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    Comments / 4
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    K R
    3d ago
    People need to let ALL their calls go to voice mail. If it is important just call them back. These scammers will NOT LEAVE A MESSAGE. THEN BLOCK THE NUMBER!
    Javahn Algeré
    4d ago
    these scammers target ppl that have just gotten out of prison, on probation, and those who are on sex offender registration list. they catch a lot of these scammers but not all of them. so be careful who you're picking up your phone to, don't give out too much info and always ask for all there information, badge # and so on
    View all comments
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