Read comments about 212-465-9832
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Area code: | 212 |
Prefix: | 465 |
Country: | United States |
State: | New York |
City: | New York |
Company: | Verizon New York |
Usage: | Landline |
Time zone: | Eastern |
Leave a comment about 2124659832:
1/23/16 - Received call on cell phone. "This is your credit card company and we've been trying to reach you about lowering your interest rate. Push 1 to speak with a consultant" (Recorded message) - I hung up.
Boy, they keep changing spoofed numbers on a regular basis. Latest call came in at 1:30 this afternoon, from allegedly Robert Purdy in NYC. I (they didn't have my name right) qualify for a reduced interest rate on my "visamastercard" because of my "good credibility". I repeated those terms several times to the [clearly Indian] woman who claimed to be in NYC, and she didn't realize I was making fun of her. I also asked about the recent arrests in NJ in a similar scan, she didn't get that, either. When I asked her why they called from a spoofed number, she had no clue what I was talking about, and transferred me. Two "supervisors" later, I spoke to "David". Sure, that's a very common name in India. He told me all my Chase credit cards (which I don't even have) qualify for a reduced interest rate. I just had to give him the 16 digit number of my card, the expiration date, the last 4 digits of my SSN, my DOB, my ZIP code, and the CVV2 # on the back of my card. Since this sounded like such a great deal, I readily gave him all the information. Google "fake name generator", and you can do that, too, if you want to take the time. At the end of this 15 minute conversation (while they were tied up and not able to scam someone else), they asked me for the 1-800 number on the back of my card, because they seemed to have a problem veryfing my card information. Surprise, surprise. I then told him that all the information I had given him was completely false, that I knew they were scammers, that the entire conversation had been taped and wiould be on YouTube tomorrow, and that he was a low-life scamming SOB.I dialed in the code for blocking their number during the initial robo-message, so they can't call again from this particular spoofed number. But they will try again. Maybe I'll enploy a different strategy next time. Got to brush up on my Hindi cuss words first.Suzy
"An important message about your current credit card". Which one is that? Just scum-bag scammers looking for targets to take money from. Block it. I wish this website would put a catagory of "scam" in the "Call Type" selection list.
A prerecorded phone call that claims this company could lower your credit card rate. This may be a scam. Don't give out your credit card information. In case you are interested in their offer, call your credit card issuer and verify those information. If your phone number is on the National Do Not Call Registry, you should not get such calls unless you have specifically agreed to accept them.
I got a call from this number last night during my pinochle game. I hit the do not disturb button on my phone, and tried calling the number today. Normally, I wouldn't call an unknown number. But, since I have family in NYC and saw them at a wedding in North Jersey on Sunday, I thought one of them might be trying to reach me. Naturally, I got a pre-recorded message that the number was not in service. So I blocked it on my cell phone.
That is because they are just using a robo-dialer to call every number one at a time using a fake number spoofed into the caller ID and see if they can convince someone to give them personal information they can use to take all your money. They are not a real business and they are also probably not even in this country so finding and prosecuting them is not likely. The government does have all the means necessary to find them, but they are too busy spying on honest citizens.
you have no clue how the Do Not CAll Registry works do you? they do not block people from calling you. Legit companies purchase the list and prevent their employees from calling people on the list because they do not want to get slapped with a big fine when somebody reports them. Since companies can and often do make the employees who violate this pay the fines out of their paychecks, employees have an incentive to play by the rules. Scam artists do not give a rats butt about the DNC list and do not subscribe to it