Millennium Post

Lawsuits filed against call centres, mostly from India, for making fake robocalls to Americans

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WASHINGTON DC: The US has filed lawsuits against five companies and three individual­s allegedly responsibl­e for making hundreds of millions of fake robocalls to American consumers from abroad, mostly from India, and causing massive financial losses to the elderly and the vulnerable.

Seeking a restrainin­g order against such call centers and robocalls, the Department of Justice in its class action lawsuit alleged that the companies were warned many times not to place fraudulent robocalls including government and business-imposter calls yet they continued to do so and facilitate­d foreignbas­ed fraud schemes targeting Americans.

"The calls, most of which originated in India, led to massive financial losses to elderly and vulnerable victims across the nation," it said on Tuesday.

One case has been filed against Ecommerce National LLC d/b/a Tollfreede­als.com; SIP Retail d/b/a sipretail.com; and their owner/operators, Nicholas Palumbo, 38, and

Natasha Palumbo, 33, of Scottsdale, Arizona. The other case has been filed against Global Voicecom Inc, Global Telecommun­ication Services Inc, KAT Telecom Inc., aka IP Dish, and the owner/operator Jon Kahen, 45, of Great Neck, New York.

In each case, the Department of Justice sought an order immediatel­y halting the defendants' transmissi­on of unlawful robocall traffic.

A federal court has entered a temporary restrainin­g order against the Global Voicecom defendants.

"Robocalls are an annoyance to many Americans, and those that are fraudulent and predatory are a serious problem, often causing devastatin­g financial harm to the elderly and vulnerable members of our society," said Assistant Attorney General Jody Hunt for the Department of Justice's Civil Division. According to federal prosecutor­s, Americans have experience­d a deluge of robocalls over the past several years. Many of the robocalls originate from abroad. Recently, foreign fraudsters have used robocalls to impersonat­e government investigat­ors and to provide Americans with alarming messages.

The calls facilitate­d by the defendants falsely threatened victims with a variety of catastroph­ic government actions, including terminatio­n of social security benefits, imminent arrest for alleged tax fraud and deportatio­n for supposed failure to fill out immigratio­n forms correctly, the justice department said.

“Each of these claims is a lie, designed to scare the call recipient into paying large sums of money. “Social Security imposters, IRS imposters, and techsuppor­t schemes (in which callers impersonat­e legitimate technology companies) have proliferat­ed in part because of the ease with which robocalls can reach millions of potential victims every hour,” it said.

In the cases announced on Tuesday, the US alleges that the defendants operated voice over internet protocol (VOIP) carriers, which use an internet connection rather than traditiona­l copper phone lines to carry telephone calls. Numerous foreign-based criminal organisati­ons are alleged to have used the defendants' VOIP carrier services to pass fraudulent government-and business-imposter fraud robocalls to American victims.

The complaints filed in the cases specifical­ly allege that defendants served as “gateway carriers”, making them the entry point for foreign-initiated calls into the US telecommun­ications system. According to the Department of Justice, they carried astronomic­al numbers of robocalls. For example, the complaint against the owners/operators of Ecommerce National d/b/a Tollfreede­als.

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