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  • Report:  #345302

Complaint Review: Publisher's Clearing House Inc. - Younkers New York

Reported By:
- Niceville, Florida,
Submitted:
Updated:

Publisher's Clearing House Inc.
11255 Woodworth Ave, Suite 403, Younkers, 10701 New York, U.S.A.
Phone:
866-808-8360
Web:
N/A
Categories:
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
My 82 year old mother has been continually contacted by a series of scam artists trying to obtain her social security number and bank information. As a result she now has an unlisted number. She recently received a letter with a header from Publishers Clearing House Inc. stating that had been trying to contact her by phone. The letter claimed she had won $755,461.00 USD dollars and an enclosed check for $4,713.00 dollars was included to help with processing fees. However she was to call the toll free number first before depositing the check for more instructions.

These people are ruthless and previously called my Mom at all hours of the night and day. They insulted her when she wouldn't provide some personal information. They have also attempted to create a rapport with the victim. We traced the first incident back to Nevada. This is clearly a criminal activity focused on taking your identity and hard earned savings. Even worse they are preying on the elderly.

The envelope was postmarked from Canada with the letterhead from Yonkers NY. The letter also stated you could contact the Internal Revenue Service at 1-514-651-7213. A backward search on this number shows it is a cell phone that belongs to Fido Solutions in Montreal Canada. Clearly the United States Government would not use a cell phone for services, particularly one from Canada!

Does anybody have an idea on how to turn this over to a Police Agency for action? I would like to see a sting operation set-up and try to protect more of our elderly citizens.

Gordon

Niceville, Florida

U.S.A.


1 Updates & Rebuttals

Mic

North Vancouver,
British Columbia,
Canada
Cross-Border Scams - How the Scam Works and What You Can Do

#2Consumer Suggestion

Tue, July 22, 2008

To the intended victim of the "Deposit for Lottery Proceeds" scam: These scams work rather simplistically. While it may appear on the surface that you can't lose, depositing an "advance" cheque (yes, I'm Canadian, and that's not a misspelling) prior to sending the scammer YOUR money, you can, and very handily. Simply, they demand some sort of "clear funds", such as a money gram, bank draft, or wire transfer, a conveyance of funds almost impossible to stop once sent. In the meantime, you have only their "cheque" to deposit to your account ... a deposit which will vapourize as quickly as it is bounced back, NSF. That leaves the "participant" short the amount of their money gram, etc., plus bank charges for the "returned item". I can almost guranantee that the company involved was not "Fido Solutions" (my cellular provider). The telephone number you were provided with was almost certainly an unlisted number or one connected to a prepaid (junk) disposable phone. A "reverse lookup" on such a number will provide only the cellular provider (Fido, in this case), not the subscriber (rip-off artist). I would suggest, at the very least, contacting Fido Solutions Security (1-888-481-3436, toll free in Canada AND the USA, 1-514-925-4590, Direct (Montreal)), and letting them know that: (a) their "telephone subscriber" is committing FRAUD, providing details AND telling them that you are making a complaint to police (they'll monitor the line, logging everything in "real time" for the authorities, without alerting the subscriber); and (b) that you are following up your complaint with the RCMP via the FBI; Then, call the FBI! This goes past any grey area of scamming, customer complaints, poor customer/employee relations; it is FRAUD and an out and out CRIMINAL ACT. Unfortunately, this country (Canada) has not-so-strong sections in its Criminal Code when it comes to cross-border fraud, like this and another one, "purchase agent for lottery tickets". The authorities on this end want victims or near-victims of these frauds to come forward and provide statements and make complaints. I don't think that the Canada-USA Extradition Agreement really addresses sending these fraudsters southward for prosecution, but they certainly are prosecutable in Canada. That might mean an all-expenses-paid trip to Montreal, Quebec, as a "witness". Call Fido. Call the FBI. Demand of the FBI that they solicit a response from the RCMP (federal) and possibly the QPP (Quebec Provincial Police). If you would like to write a "Letter to the Editor", the daily newspaper with the greatest circulation in Montreal is likely The Montreal Gazette. Canadians are getting really PISSED at these bas***d mail fraud artists in Montreal pulling off this horse****! Some of them are from here, and some just operate from this country due to its lax laws in this regard. Mic Vancouver, BC, Canada

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