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In these kinds of scams, someone will contact you (phone call, text or email) and claim to work for a government agency (federal, state or local) or even an important company. The caller might say there's an arrest warrant in your name - and you need to pay up, right now, or risk being arrested.
This is "Jail Call 01-03-2020" by Louisville Metro Police Dept on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.
The so-called "Warrant" Scam is aimed at scaring would-be victims into believing there's a warrant out for their arrest. And according to the scammer, they will be sent to jail unless they pay money. Watch this video featuring Sgt. Joe Ellis of the Sheriff's Financial Crimes Unit to learn how to avoid becoming a victim of the "Warrant" Scam.
First you need to sign up with your jail call provider, then you need to sign up with SecurTel. Get a number assigned to you that your inmate loved one will call. When they call that number the call will be forwarded to your phone and you'll bypass the long distance rate.
Over the past few months I’ve received a few calls from one of those correctional facility collect call services, i.e. an automated voice says “An inmate at [name of correctional facility] is calling for you [the inmate says their name].
If it sounds unbelievable, then it probably is. Don't get gift card scammed this holiday season. www.scamspotter.org Short-listed for AICP Comedy Editorial…
10 Σεπ 2015 · At least two variations of the collect-call-from-prison scam exist. In one version, the caller actually is an inmate from a local prison, trying to make phone calls at your expense.