While many telephone sales calls are made on behalf of legitimate organizations offering bona fide products and services, some unsolicited phone sales calls can be frauds. That’s why the Federal Trade Commission encourages you to listen carefully when you get a "cold call."
Fraudulent telemarketers may get your phone number from a telephone directory, mailing list, or "sucker list," a directory of consumers who have already lost money to fraudulent prize promotions or merchandise sales. Sucker lists include names, addresses, phone numbers – even how much money you may have spent on telemarketing scams. Unscrupulous promoters buy and sell sucker lists on the theory that consumers who have been deceived once are easy prey for additional scams.
According to FTC officials, credit card loss protection offers and advance fee loan offers are especially popular pitches for fraudulent telemarketers.
The FTC says that to get people to buy worthless credit card loss protection offers, telephone scam artists suggest that:
But, the consumer protection agency says, these fraudsters are simply trying to exploit economic uncertainty. The FTC’s consumer advice: Remember that federal law limits your liability for unauthorized changes to $50, and ditch the pitch for credit card loss protection. If you didn’t authorize a charge, don’t pay it. Follow your credit card issuer’s procedures for disputing charges you haven’t authorized.
Fraudulent telemarketers virtually “guarantee” that you will get a loan, regardless of your credit history, but you have to pay a fee first. A telemarketer who asks – or receives payment – for the promise of an loan is breaking the law.
The FTC says legitimate guaranteed offers of credit don’t require payments up front. Although legitimate lenders may require you to pay application, appraisal or credit report fees, these fees seldom are necessary before the lender is identified and the application completed.
What’s more, says the FTC, these fees are paid to the lender, not the person who is arranging the “guaranteed” loan. Their consumer counsel: Don’t pay for a promise, and remember that it’s against the law for companies doing business by phone to promise you a loan and ask you to pay for it before they deliver.
You may not want to ditch all cold calls, but there are ways to spot those that spell f-r-a-u-d, including:
The FTC works to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. Watch a video, How to File a Complaint, at ftc.gov/video to learn more. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.