REC warns of sophisticated phone scammers
REC warns member-owners to beware of scammers posing as REC employees and threatening to disconnect power unless payment is made over the phone. In many cases, spammers are able to “spoof” a familiar phone number with a local area code to make the call look more legitimate.
If you receive a suspicious call, please keep the following in mind:
At this time, REC has suspended disconnections for non-payment.
e Cooperative is not calling to demand payment on accounts that have fallen behind.
REC does not use collection agencies to contact members by phone.
If you receive a phone call from someone claiming to be an REC employee demanding immediate payment, report the suspicious activity to local law enforcement.
“If you have any doubt at all, the best way to protect yourself is to hang up and call REC directly,” said John Crawford, REC’s manager of safety, risk and operational support services. “at puts you in control of the situation and ensures you are talking safely with an REC employee.”
Other steps you can take to protect yourself and your personal information:
Never give personal account or payment information to someone you do not know.
Do not answer calls from unknown phone numbers.
Don’t follow instructions on a pre-recorded message, such as “Press 1 to speak to a live operator.” is is likely an attempt to lure you into providing personal information.
Do not share personal or nancial information, including your Social Security number or bank account information, with a caller you do not know.
e caller might say they have the information and “just need to con rm it with you.” at is a trap.
Do not make payments by gi cards, prepaid debit cards or wire transfers. Fraudsters favor those methods because they are di cult to trace.