Scam Alert: Law enforcement officers will not ask you to use gift cards to avoid arrest

January 26, 2022
1 min read
The United States Marshals Service needs your help to stop several phone scams targeting residents in Coastal Georgia.

The United States Marshals Service needs your help to stop several phone scams targeting residents in Coastal Georgia.

United States Marshal David L. Lyons reports scammers are impersonating law enforcement officers and threatening to arrest residents for failing to appear in federal court. In lieu of arrest, the fraudsters then offer to collect a fictitious fine through payment by gift card, phone application or other remote means.

According to Lyons, the scheme has proven highly successful at both the local and national level. Fraudsters often establish credibility with callers by employing a threatening tone, providing information like badge numbers, names of actual law enforcement officials or federal judges, and by referencing real courthouse addresses. The scammers have even spoofed phone numbers to appear legitimate on caller ID.

Lyons definitively states the U.S. Marshals Service and the federal court will never ask for card numbers, wire transfers or routing numbers over the telephone.

Any suspicious phone calls should be authenticated by hanging up and calling the federal court or the U.S. Marshals offices in Augusta, Brunswick or Savannah directly. Marshal Lyons expands, “The best defense to these scams is public awareness. Sharing this information with your friends and family members may prevent them from becoming the next victim.”

If you have been targeted in a phone scam or other fraudulent activity, please report the information to the FBI through its Internet Crime Complaint Center (www.IC3.gov) and to the Federal Trade Commission (www.reportfraud.ftc.gov).

Additional information about court scams can be found on the websites for the United States Courts (www.uscourts.gov) and the United States Marshals Service (www.usmarshals.gov).

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