Seniors
Related: About this forumSpam phone call
Got a call (recording) that my Social Security number has been 'frozen' due to criminal activity.
If this is a mistake, I can 'unfreeze' it by calling a toll free number
and paying a fee using my bank account info to pay the fee.
(They'll just take the money for the fee out of my bank account)
Paying them this way is the only way (it said) for me to again be able to use my Social Security number,
ever again,
and to prevent legal action against me for criminal activity.
lillypaddle
(9,605 posts)Response to lillypaddle (Reply #1)
Stuart G This message was self-deleted by its author.
lapfog_1
(30,143 posts)only I'm not on SS and not that near retirement
left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)But you have a "Social Security number"
lapfog_1
(30,143 posts)I haven't.
so my guess is that they are picking people to call at random
left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)Just that your SS number has been frozen due to illegal activity.
It could be from a payslip, bank records, etc.
lapfog_1
(30,143 posts)and they can't "freeze" my SSN... they might try to file for my benefits... but I suspect the SS admin is careful enough to verify identities.
This is a robo scam call, nothing more.
left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)End of conversation.
3Hotdogs
(13,394 posts)Turbineguy
(38,372 posts)for a trump supporter.
MuseRider
(34,364 posts)I hung up but these kinds of calls always make me feel funny.
question everything
(48,797 posts)AARP Magazine has a story about their reporter actually following thru. Gave them a bogus number which they "confirmed."
Remember: a government agency does not contact us via email not via phone!
I just got a call from "Rachel" card members or something, I just hung up. I thought that they shut her off..
Meadowoak
(6,215 posts)TreasonousBastard
(43,049 posts)Estonia, and every other damn place are almost free we're overwhelmed with robocalls.
And it won't get any better until governments and telecomm cos. agree on a technology to kill it.
murielm99
(31,433 posts)so I called S.S. I made a telephone appointment with them and they called me back.
The very official looking letter and form said that I had a claim because I had started to receive a government pension based on non-covered earnings. Nowhere did it list my S.S. number. The form wanted my number, though.
The gentleman I spoke to from S.S. said mine was the third inquiry that day that he had handled about the same thing. He said it was a scam, and to ignore the letter. I am saving the letter and the form, with notes on it.
I don't know where they got my name and address. I have been receiving SS payments since August 2014. I did some substitute teaching for awhile, but not enough to qualify for a pension.
Be careful if you receive anything called a "Government Pension Questionnaire." Contact S.S. and don't send back any forms. As my helper said, all they want is my S.S. number.
woodsprite
(12,199 posts)in 15 million ssn's getting out in the wild. That was only one breach, and there have been many, many more. Not all breaches contain the SSN, some may just be cc numbers, address, name, email or driver's license number. Since they wanted you to call, I suspect that the first thing they would ask you is to give them your SSN to "verify their records".
In 2013, where I work had a breach where 75,000 ssn's and other personal info was stolen. Anyone (student, staff, faculty, etc.) who ever collected a paycheck from us was automatically enrolled in a credit monitoring service for 3 years. We received a text/email if anything unusual came up and a report monthly of any activity. As soon as that rolled off someone was using my cc/banking info to open cell accounts and purchase phones. I didn't know anything about it until one of the accounts got put into collections because "I hadn't paid" the $1200 iPhone purchase. Got it straightened out, and locked my credit through all 3 credit bureaus. Of course, one of those 3 bureaus was Experian
Here's another scam, built around the Microsoft "service tech" call. "James" called our house (could barely understand him). Apparently the invoice for the help he gave me with my system hadn't been paid, and he was calling to get that straightened out. I could pay with a credit card and they wouldn't put it into collector's hands. Dipshit! If he had called my MIL, she probably would have given out her info and paid the "bill".
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)The warning is real.
The call is spam.
brewens
(15,359 posts)that. Text saying they liked the truck and were fine with the price which was the first red flag. Who doesn't try and get you down a couple hundred buck? Then asking me where to send the check. I assume they were going to tell me it was an electronic check and ask for my bank information. I of course said a check was not necessary and that they could just pay cash when they came to get the truck. Never even got a reply after that.
It would have had to been one serious moron to have given me my asking price anyway. For an old Chevy, it was better than most, but I expected to let it go for at least a couple hundred less than I asked.
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)If you hit the link, it was a San Diego phone number. I called the San Diego Police Department, and they asked if I was conned out of any money, I told them no, and then they said that they could do nothing. My guess is that the San Diego police have received many calls about this..If the number was from San Diego. These people could move from week to week.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10181216183
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)How do I know? If I got the call on May 13, and the Social Security office told me that this was going on, and beware of this, and If you got the call on June 3, about 3 weeks later, then if they were not making any money, they would have stopped calling. You do not have a group of people making illegal calls for weeks on end, (assuming that it happened way before May 11) without making money. If this con wasn't working, the people that run it, would have shut the con down. Why? Because it was not working. Why waste your time on a con that doesn't work? Get one that does work. The purpose of this con is to make money for the con artists. It must be working cause they are still calling.
Hassler
(3,676 posts)Message.
BigmanPigman
(52,241 posts)The few times I have actually answered the phone I regretted it since it was always a telemarketer or a scam.
SCantiGOP
(14,238 posts)Since she was a Christian I did everything she told me to, including sending her a check for $4,500 to cover bank fees.
That was six years ago. It has sure been nice living between my mansion on the Spanish Riveria and my 85 foot yacht ever since that $80 million dollars was deposited in my account.
You people shouldnt be so cynical.
Totally Tunsie
(10,885 posts)not IN or ON them. How is life in the alley?
SCantiGOP
(14,238 posts)Its pretty nice, but the cops keep arresting me for yelling at my servants when they walk by.
CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)I have 2 hand held phones on the same line. The last time they called, I picked up and answered. When they identified themselves as IRS, I went to the 2nd phone, turned it on, then on one unit I put on the speaker function and the feedback caused them to hang up.
That was my third and final IRS call--about 3 years ago.
An airhorn from a Dollar store works too.
Srkdqltr
(7,656 posts)the first time the voice sounded distressed so I asked..in a stern voice.. Where are you??
he wined again .. grama...this is your oldest grandson.. so I hung up on him..
Just to be sure I called my oldest grandson. He got a good laugh about it and so did they guys he was working with.
Now I just say .. get off my phone.. and hang up.
Got one from my granddaughter like that .. I just hung up.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)but if I did, and someone said, "I'm your oldest grandchild" I'm sure I'd immediately know it wasn't my real grandkid. I mean, wouldn't they say something like, "Grandma! It's me, Stephanie!"
Also, if your grandchildren call you something other than grandma, you'll immediately know it's a fraudulent call.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)But if it did not work, the thieves would not do it.
TlalocW
(15,624 posts)I'll mess with them to see how long I can keep them on the line giving them a bad credit card number, which, whoops, I transposed these two numbers, try it again so I can get 0% interest. Still didn't work? Oh, my fault. That 0 is actually a worn-down 8, try it again. Normally after about 3 tries they realize I'm messing with them and start cursing me out, but recently one guy transferred me to someone else, and we had this conversation.
Scammer: Yes, what is the last name on the account?
Me: Keyface.
Scammer: Yes, thank you, sir, and what is your first name?
Me: Don.
Scammer: Yes, thank you sir... (5 second pause) You mother-fucker!
Me: Figure it out, did ya?
Scammer: <hangup>
Lately though, I haven't had time to play so I've been meaner and after the scammer greets me, I'll say something like, "Listen, I was fucking your whore of a mother last night, and she says she's disappointed in your career choices." Then I start playing my harmonica loudly into the phone while the person yells at me until they hang up. It's childish, but it's also oddly satisfying.
TlalocW