HINTS FROM HELOISE
Dear Readers:
Today’s Sound Off is about another scam being done by cybercriminals: I received a notice several times in my email.
Dear Heloise:
PRACTICAL, DEPENDABLE TIPS FOR TODAY’S BUSY CONSUMERS
It’s from a company I never used for tax preparation. Of course, I knew it was a scam; however, not all people will know this and might send them the money they are requesting. The notice read, “Dear Customer: Your invoice-RB-9617 for 349.99 is attached. Please remit payment at your earliest convenience. Thank you for your business — we appreciate it very much.”
Be warned that this is a scam.
They’re after your money and/ or your files. Always be careful when you get messages that say, “Deposit on Hold,” “Account Suspended” or “Critical Suspension.” These headings are supposed to frighten you into action.
Thieves will try to steal your credit and debit card information or access your bank account and many other things you’d rather were kept private.
— Lana W., Oklahoma City
Lana, every year, especially around tax season, scammers come out of the woodwork like vermin. If you receive a suspicious
email, you can open it, but do not click on any of the sites they ask you to visit and stay away from the telephone numbers provided. Close out the email and report it as spam, phishing or junk.
It’s important to help create a paper trail of evidence to help the Federal Trade Commission stop these unscrupulous business practices.
Contact the FTC at 1-877-3824357 (from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. ET). You can also contact the FBI at www.tips.fbi.gov or by calling 1-800-225-5324. Believe me, the FTC and the FBI take online scamming very seriously. Let’s all do
our part to help the government stop them by reporting these scammers.
Dear Readers:
— Heloise
Going on a trip and want a safe hiding place for your most valuable items?
Before your trip, you can:
n Place them in a lockbox and store in the trunk of a locked car in a locked garage.
n Wrap them in foil and place them in your freezer under other frozen items.
n Hide them inside a child’s stuffed animal and place it by other toys.
n Hide them somewhere in a garage or garden shed.
n Install a wall or floor safe somewhere no one would think to look.
n Take these items to a close, trusted friend or relative’s home. Have them store it for you.
n Hide them in a bank vault. This is the most secure hiding place of all.
— Heloise
Send your hints to Heloise@ Heloise.com or mail them to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000.