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Office of the Inspector General
 

About

Fraud Alerts

Scammers Falsely Purporting to be Calling from the Treasury Office of Inspector General, Office of Investigations; the Treasury Office of Legal Affairs or Emailing from the Office of the Secretary of The Treasury:  Scammers call an individual asserting that the individual has been awarded a grant or a similar sum of money and request personal information or a sum of money to “release” the funds.   The Treasury does not have such a program.   Likewise, e-mails promising a sum of money and purporting to be from the Treasury Secretary or his staff are false.  We urge recipients of such calls or e-mails to be extremely wary of any scheme requiring an advance payment for a later promise of funds—these are hallmarks of scams.  A similar scam is a caller falsely representing that he is from the Internal Revenue Service or impersonating an investigator from this Office and demanding payment or information.  These callers have been described as threatening or abusive, and tell victims they need to make immediate payment to forestall arrest.  THESE ARE FRAUDS.  PLEASE EXERCISE CAUTION IN YOUR DEALINGS WITH ANYONE PURPORTING TO BE FROM A GOVERNMENT AGENCY AND DEMANDING MONEY OR INFORMATION.  Further information concerning one type of these frauds is available at http://www.irs.gov/uac/Newsroom/IRS-Repeats-Warning-about-Phone-Scams.

 

The U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury), Office of Inspector General, investigates individuals' use of fraudulent Treasury-related financial obligations or accounts to attempt purchases or pay debts.  Fraud perpetrators across the nation have recently begun to use fraudulent promissory notes and/or private bonds as vehicles to defraud investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars. 

The Department of the Treasury is also aware of several fraudulent schemes that involve what are claimed to be securities issued or backed by the Treasury Department or another part of the U.S. Government.  These scams have been directed towards banks, charities, individuals, and companies which seek payment on the fraudulent securities. Many of the scams originate from persons attempting to avoid paying tax obligations: the Internal Revenue Service provides additional background and information on these scams here.

Another scheme is a variation of a common fraud generally known as "redemption" or "acceptance for value" that incorrectly asserts the United States government has trust accounts linked to each citizen. The theory is not supported in fact or law and has been soundly rejected by the federal courts. Perpetrators will annotate or stamp invoices with "Accept for Value" or similar language, with various numbers purporting to be account numbers. Such annotations are without merit and establish no rights or privileges in any federal or state account or agency.

Recently, Treasury OIG has become aware of a different variation of this scheme.  Individuals are obtaining routing numbers from Treasury bureaus, specifically the Financial Management Service (FMS) and the Bureau of the Public Debt (BPD), or a Federal Reserve bank, and using these numbers to make the false notes appear genuine.

Further, many of these fraudsters hold seminars throughout the United States, teaching attendees how to create these fictitious documents and how to use federal routing numbers.  Individuals are now creating false checking accounts with the federal routing numbers, using their social security number as the checking account number, and listing the bank as either the FMS or the BPD.  Be advised that Treasury bureaus and the Treasury Direct Program do NOT offer checking accounts for the public,  and they will NOT honor any of these checks. Participating in these scams can result in serious criminal and civil penalties.

It is also a violation of Federal Law to misuse the Treasury seal or the words, titles, symbols, or emblems of the Treasury Department, or any service, bureau, office or Treasury subdivision; see 31 U.S.C. 333.

 

Click the links below for specific information on sample fraudulent schemes and documents that falsely use name of Treasury bureaus and/or officials. These and similar documents are NOT valid negotiable financial instruments and recipients should NOT accept them or attempt to use them.

 

 

Scams Claiming to be from the Treasury Inspector General

Learn about scams using the Treasury Inspector Genereal's name.

How Marketable Treasury Securities Work

Learn about the types of securities, how they are sold, and how book-entry securities are held.

Scams Involving Treasury Securities

Find out more about the renting, leasing, or blocking of Treasury securities.

Examples of Known Phony Securities

See example of phony securities and learn more about the scams.

Historical Bond Fraud

Learn about the many scams involving historical bonds.

Prime Bank Instrument Fraud

Find out about the different types of fraud, and important buzzwords and red flags to watch for. Also, get links for investigative help.

How to Protect Yourself from Investment Scams

Useful tips that will help protect you from scams.

Other Fraud Sites of Interest

Links to resources that will help you protect yourself from fraud.

Prohibition Against Misuse of Treasury Names, Terms, Symbols, Stationary, Etc.

See examples of illegal solicitous mailings made to appear like official federal government communication.

Bogus Sight Drafts/Bills of Exchange Drawn on the Treasury

Warnings issued by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency; examples of fraudulent drafts.

ComputerCop software 

Neither the Treasury nor the Treasury Executive Office for Asset Forfeiture endorses this or any other particular product and the use of equitable sharing funds does not in any way imply such an endorsement.  A letter purporting to be from the Treasury Executive Office for Asset Forfeiture [link] is not genuine. 
 
 

 

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Last Updated: 7/2/2015 11:19 AM
REPORT WASTE, FRAUD,
ABUSE
OIG Hotline: Click Here
For information about whistleblowing and reprisal and about your rights and responsibilities as a Treasury employee or contractor, please contact the OIG Whistleblower Ombudsman Program at
202-927-0650
or
OIGCounsel@oig.treas.gov
For information about whistleblowing and reprisal and about your rights and responsibilities as a Treasury employee or contractor, please contact the OIG Whistleblower Ombudsman Program at
202-927-0650
or

COUNCIL OF INSPECTORS GENERAL ON FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT
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The Council of Inspectors General on Financial Oversight was established by the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Pub.L. 111-203). Council members share information about their ongoing work, with a focus on concerns that may apply to the broader financial sector and ways to improve financial oversight. The Council is made of nine financial regulatory agency Inspectors General and is chaired by Eric Thorson, Inspector General, U.S. Department of Treasury.

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