The message reads: "The $450.00 (CAD) from MYA ROBERTSON sent on June 19 2022 has now been verified you may now deposit your funds"
SPAM TEXTS PHISHING LINKS SMS SCAM
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(2)(O)(9)(2)(7)(O)(7)
The river's name derives from *Iska, a Common Brittonic root meaning "water" or "abounding in fish", and a cognate of pysg, the plural word for "fish" in Welsh.[2][3] The same root separately developed into the English Axe and Esk, the Welsh Usk, though not, as some have claimed, the word whisky, this latter being from the Classical Irish/Gaelic uisgi "water" (the fuller phrase being uisgi betha; Irish: uisce beatha; Scottish Gaelic: uisge beatha; "aqua vitae" ("water of life")).
____________
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
as I know, a spam message, but have received unauthorized charge of $39.90 on my credit card for several months by this company. It appears on my cc statement as scrhugcom 8889835075CT. I called the company's customer service at (833) 552-0869 (from their website) and spoke with a woman who told me that other than someone trying to steal my identity, the only other way to have signed up for this monthly subscription was me signing up "by accident". She then "reviewed" my file and asked me for my home address and email address, which I negligently provided, and lo and behold, those were the home address and my email address used to sign up for their subscription, which she said, showed it wasn't someone fraudulently using my information to sign up for their subscription. I told her that I have excellent credit and have absolutely no need for their service and never would have "accidentally" signed up, and asked that all of my monthly unauthorized subscription charges be credited to my credit card. She then told me that she couldn't credit all such charges because it appeared that there was no fraud by anyone trying to sign-up using my identity and that I must have done so by accident, whereupon she tried to offer me their "service" for $5.00/month. In any event, I "cancelled" the subscription and she submitted a "refu
____________
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
CUSTOMER SERVICE +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0) HEADQUARTERS PHONE NUMBER +1(8)(O)(5)(4)(1)(0)(5)(0)(4)(0)
as I know, a spam message, but have received unauthorized charge of $39.90 on my credit card for several months by this company. It appears on my cc statement as scrhugcom 8889835075CT. I called the company's customer service at (833) 552-0869 (from their website) and spoke with a woman who told me that other than someone trying to steal my identity, the only other way to have signed up for this monthly subscription was me signing up "by accident". She then "reviewed" my file and asked me for my home address and email address, which I negligently provided, and lo and behold, those were the home address and my email address used to sign up for their subscription, which she said, showed it wasn't someone fraudulently using my information to sign up for their subscription. I told her that I have excellent credit and have absolutely no need for their service and never would have "accidentally" signed up, and asked that all of my monthly unauthorized subscription charges be credited to my credit card. She then told me that she couldn't credit all such charges because it appeared that there was no fraud by anyone trying to sign-up using my identity and that I must have done so by accident, whereupon she tried to offer me their "service" for $5.00/month. In any event, I "cancelled" the subscription and she submitted a "refu
Got the same mail! It has more info and a bogus website link. Take care!
How do I get out of the Settlement?
If you do not want to be part of the Settlement, you must submit an Opt-Out Form no later than October 8, 2020. You may obtain the Opt-Out Form at www.GooglePlusDataLitigation.com. Your completed Opt-Out Form may be submitted via e-mail to [email protected], or via postal mail to the following address: Google Plus Data Litigation, Attn: Opt-Out Requests, P.O. Box 58220, Philadelphia, PA, 19102. If you opt-out of the Settlement, you will not be bound by the Settlement Agreement, you will not receive a Settlement Payment, and you will not be allowed to object to the Settlement.
Do I have a lawyer in this case?
Yes. The Court has appointed Class Counsel to represent you and other Settlement Class Members. In this case, Class Counsel are John A. Yanchunis and Ryan J. McGee of the law firm Morgan & Morgan Complex Litigation Group; Clayeo C. Arnold and Joshua H. Watson of the law firm Clayeo C. Arnold Professional Law Corporation; and Franklin D. Azar and Margeaux R. Azar of the law firm Franklin D. Azar & Associates, P.C. You will not be charged for these lawyers. If you want to be represented by another lawyer, you may hire one at your own expense.
How will the lawyers be paid?
The attorneys representing the Settlement Class have not yet received any payment for their legal services or any reimbursement of the costs or out-of-pocket expenses they have incurred. Class Counsel plans to ask the Court to award attorneys’ fees from the Settlement Fund not to exceed $1,875,000 which is 25% of the Settlement Fund, and reimbursement of costs and expenses in the approximate amount of $200,000.
received an email from fordj@[email protected] they where saying it was urgent to contact them, not to ignore. In the long run, they had a fake cancer story blah blah blah, 2 million bucks later. I didn't bite. I told this person they're a scammer an should be ashamed of themselves using a cancer story and that I have reported them. So beware.
Bogus offer! Beware!! "You are now eligible for 0% financing. Press 1 to activate it. This offer is only available for the next ten minutes."
Sent me this message with a dangerous virus link to view. Fido text fraud. " 14530 bk (10001) FID0-MSG You have received a payment! See : http://188.166.166.189 View the link above for details. Opt-out send STOP "
Officer James Morrison. From various 613 (area code) numbers. I have blocked several of them. They keep calling.
Rec'd a call on my phone telling me Amazon has hired 23 people in my area and to go online to internetprofit.org to finish my application. These people need to get a life. First of all...I haven't filled out a job application online...secondly, why just 23 people? If this crap was so hot they would have more than that.
My phone didnt receive a call (not in my caller display anyways), but when I listened to my new voicemail today it was a man with an indian accent claiming to be Officer James Morris and that I needed to call him back or basically face the consequences,that I cant let this go or else something bad will happen!!
It’s illegal to send unsolicited commercial email messages to wireless devices. The messages may promise free gifts or cheap services. Scam artists posing as Govt agencies could send messages threatening action unless money is paid. Spam texts can contain phishing links designed to steal personal info or may infect user's phone.
2017-11-19 00:55:13According to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, citizens lose millions of dollars, each year, by responding fraudulent text messages. Scammers use deceptive text messages to lure consumers into providing personal or financial information
2017-11-18 22:40:22Report spam SMS to ACMA by forwarding to 0429 999 888. If you have a grievance about a specific SMS message, submit a complaint to the ACMA or contact the ACMA on 1300 855 180.
2017-11-18 22:27:50Organizations must only send marketing text messages to individuals, if they have agreed to receive them, except where there is a clearly defined customer relationship. Forward spam SMS messages to 7726 for the network operator to act.
2017-11-18 22:03:32SPAM TEXTS PHISHING LINKS SMS SCAM
Spam texts (SMS Messages) are sent by computers, bots or apps programmed to spit out hundreds of messages every minute. Scammers expect only a very small percentage of recipients to respond. To increase the chance of successful hits, scammers flood mobile phone networks with millions of messages. Their ultimate aim is financial gain by defrauding unwary recipients who respond assuming that the spam text message they received is legit. Report at Myrmillo.com.
It's important for you to be aware of various types of SMS scams and hence be guarded.
The fraud business of making money by sending spam SMS commenced with "lottery winner" scam! It's wide spread across the globe. Unwary recipients are amazed to hear they have been "randomly" selected to win a large prize. Scammers use names of well known corporations including Coca Cola, Pepsi, Apple, Microsoft to make the text appear legit. Report at Myrmillo.com.
Text message disguised to make it appear as if sent by your bank or your credit card service provider could make the recipient call back or click a phishing link, all designed to steal account credentials. Deceived users panic when they are alerted by unauthorized debits. Report at Myrmillo.com.
Scammers send bogus messages informing users that their loan application is approved and to get back to them, to receive funds in their bank accounts. The deceived user ends up making an advance fee payment for a loan which never existed. Dubious websites collect loan applications and pass on the phone numbers of unsuspecting customers to criminal networks, for a fee. Report at Myrmillo.com.
Fake debt collectors and bogus law firms, send out messages about unpaid debts. Same message is sent to thousands of people, at the same time! Someone who may have defaulted on a loan could get scammed into believing that the message, is in fact, from his creditor and end up paying money which does nothing, to reduce his debt. Report at Myrmillo.com.
In US, Canada and the UK, messages demanding tax payments are a major source of fraud. The messages are largely sent out by scam operators in foreign countries who have local agents to collect "tax" from panicking tax payers. Once a tax payer reverts, the fake tax agents threaten arrest & to freeze bank accounts. Report at Myrmillo.com.
Like tax fraud, grant money texts also originate largely from foreign shores. Scammers assures victims that they were selected by the Government due to their clean criminal record and for not being bankrupt!! You would wonder how anyone could fall for such stupid scam! But according to the FTC, every year, citizens collectively lose millions of dollars, in this scam. Report at Myrmillo.com.
People complain of receiving sudden alerts from their banks or credit card providers about debit of money (usually in small denominations, under $100) which they had not spent or authorized. The unauthorized charges are often result of a preceding phishing scam where the user would have unknowingly shared his banking info with scammers. Report at Myrmillo.com.