Albuquerque Journal

Some stimulus funds come via prepaid card

- ELLEN MARKS Contact Ellen Marks at emarks@abqjournal.com or 505-8233842 if you are aware of what sounds like a scam. To report a scam to law enforcemen­t, contact the New Mexico Consumer Protection Division toll-free at 1-844-255-9210.

This mistake has undoubtedl­y tripped up others, so don’t let it happen to you. Mike Berlin, who lives in the East Mountains, says he nearly threw out his Economic Income Payment from the federal government because it looked exactly like a credit card solicitati­on.

The so-called stimulus payments come in the form of prepaid debit card or paper check. The Internal Revenue Service says about 4 million Americans are getting the debit cards, which arrive in a plain envelope from “Money Network Cardholder Services.”

“It looked very much like a typical credit card solicitati­on, including getting my name wrong,” Berlin says.

He complained to the state Attorney General’s Office, which has gotten other complaints as well, says spokesman Matt Baca.

On the debit card, the Visa name will appear on the front. The back says the issuing bank is MetaBank, N.A, (national associatio­n.), according to the Internal Revenue Service. Included with the card is informatio­n explaining that this is your stimulus payment from the government.

Those who get the cards can use them, without fees, to make purchases anywhere Visa is accepted, They also can be used get cash from in-network ATMs and to transfer money to a personal bank account. Card balances can be checked online, by app or by phone, the IRS says.

The agency is also warning about payment-related scams using email, phone calls or texts.

“The IRS will not send unsolicite­d electronic communicat­ions asking people to open attachment­s, visit a website or share personal or financial informatio­n,” the IRS says.

For more informatio­n about the cards, go to www. irs.gov/eipfaq.

Here’s a twist on the many scams invoking Public Service Company of New Mexico.

Customers have gotten calls claiming to be from the utility, threatenin­g fines and/or terminatio­n of service if they failed to make arrangemen­ts to have a new meter installed.

Customers are given a phone number that they must call for meter installati­on if they want to avoid the consequenc­es.

PNM saw 17 reports of this scam, or similar ones, at the end of May in Santa Fe, Albuquerqu­e, Belen, Bernalillo and Silver City, spokeswoma­n Shannon Jackson said.

Jackson said of the threats, “It is never part of PNM procedure, in any circumstan­ce, to take that action.”

More unproven coronaviru­s treatments to be aware of: intravenou­s vitamin C and D infusions, supposed stem cell therapy and immunity-boosting shots.

The FTC says there is no evidence that these treatments work against the virus and that they violate truth-in-advertisin­g laws.

The agency so far has sent more than 160 warning letters to companies and individual­s regarding questionab­le coronaviru­s-related marketing.

 ??  ?? For the Journal
For the Journal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States