Madigan’s office has received several complaints this week from
people who have been contacted by scammers pretending to be
officials representing the Illinois Attorney General with bogus
claims that the call recipients have warrants out for their arrest.
Call recipients, some of whom received multiple calls, are told they
will be arrested if they do not pay the fines within 30 minutes.
The phone scams “spoof” caller ID devices into displaying what
appear to be legitimate calls from the (773) area code in the
Chicago area. Scam artists on the other end of the line claim they
are representatives of the Illinois Attorney General collecting on a
phony debt and instruct their targets to contact the caller within
30 minutes to make payment arrangements in order to avoid arrest by
local authorities.
“Someone calling you to demand money upfront is the hallmark of a
phone scam, especially if the caller claims to represent a
legitimate government agency. My office will never contact you
seeking money or threatening your arrest,” Madigan said. “If you
receive a call like this, hang up immediately.”
Madigan urged Illinois residents to report the scam to her Consumer
Fraud Bureau at 1-800-386-5438 or by visiting her website.
Madigan said this scam is the latest version of what the Federal
Trade Commission has termed a “government imposter scam.”
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Last June, Madigan’s office received complaints of a similar
scheme from Illinois residents who had received phony emails from
scammers posing as representatives of the Attorney General’s office,
claiming the targets owed outstanding debts and could face potential
prosecution if they didn’t pay up.
In August 2014, Madigan’s office issued an alert after receiving
complaints from Illinois residents who had received calls from
scammers claiming to represent the Internal Revenue Service.
Regardless of the tactics in the individual scheme, the goal is
always to get the targets to send money. Madigan urged Illinois
residents who receive calls or emails from supposed government
agencies to hang up or delete the email and contact the government
agency directly to report the correspondence.
[Office of the Attorney General Lisa
Madigan]
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