7 On Your Side warns of phone scam involving police impersonator

Friday, December 19, 2014
7 On Your Side warns of phone scam involving police impersonator
Law enforcement agencies are warning people about a new version of an old scam that's now hitting the Bay Area.

Law enforcement agencies are warning people about a new version of an old scam that's now hitting the Bay Area.

A Marin County woman fell victim to the scam. Just days before Christmas, a criminal took nearly all of Carolyn Collins' savings. He also scared her terribly. When she realized what happened, she wanted to warn others of what happened.

Collins was in her room at her assisted living home in Marin County when the call came out of the blue. The man on the phone told her she was in deep trouble with the law.

"I was awakened out of a sound sleep," she said. "'I'm a policeman, my name is Zach Miller and you are under arrest. There is a warrant for your arrest now.'"

The man said she failed to show up for jury duty, she had to pay $500 right away or she'd go to jail.

"I was stunned. I believed him. He was a policeman I trust policemen," she said.

The man ordered her to go to the bank, withdraw $500 and load it onto a green-dot money card. So she got dressed and headed out. The man stayed on the line with Collins the whole time as she walked first to the bank and then to CVS to buy the money card.

Collins returned home with the money card, the man still talking in her ear.

"He said, 'Now scrape off the silver lining on the back,'" she said.

She read him the card number on the back. That's when the crook pounced, used the number to pull out all her money. He told her she had to appear before Judge Robertson in courtroom on Tuesday to clear her name.

She was ready to go to court until a friend told her there was no such court, no such policeman. She'd been scammed. Her money gone.

"I've been saving it up. I live on SSI," she said. "I don't have that much money at my fingertips."

Collins contacted 7 On Your Side not to try to get her money back, but to help others.

The takeaway from Collins' experience is to never pay someone you don't know with a pre-paid money card or a wire transfer. Criminals like those payments because they are untraceable. Police and government agencies would never demand immediate payment over the phone and they would never insist you pay with a money card. If you get such a call, it's a scam.

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