Westside Eagle-Observer

Officials caution public about scams

- TRACY M. NEAL NWA Democrat-Gazette Tracy M. Neal can be reached by email at tneal@nwaonline.com or Twitter @NWATracy.

BENTONVILL­E — State officials want people to be aware that criminals are posing as contact tracers to gain personal or financial informatio­n from people.

Danyelle McNeill, spokeswoma­n for the Arkansas Department of Health, said the department received word of at least one recent incident of someone posing as a contact tracer.

Case investigat­ors reach out to covid-19 patients shortly after a positive test result is confirmed to learn about the patient’s close contacts. The contact tracer then calls the close contacts to inform them about their exposure to the virus and gives them instructio­ns about how to quarantine, she said.

“Contact tracing is a critical tool to stopping the spread of covid-19,” McNeill said. “We ask that people answer the phone and work with the contact tracer to provide informatio­n or take steps that help protect the people around them.”

Tracers help those who have been infected recall where they have been and with whom they had close contact while they were infectious, McNeill said.

“Contact tracers will never ask for any payment, credit card number or bank account informatio­n,” she said. “If this is ever discussed, it’s a sign that the caller is not a legitimate contact tracer.”

Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge released a warning last month about scams that involve contact tracing. One way people are impersonat­ing contact tracers is by sending text messages containing a link and claiming that, by clicking on the link, the recipient will be contacted about a positive test. In actuality, the link gives the scam artist direct access to the phone holder’s personal informatio­n, Rutledge said.

Clicking on the link will download software onto the device that allows financial records to be accessed, according to a news release from the Federal Trade Commission.

“Con artists are impersonat­ing contact tracers in order to steal your money and your identity,” Rutledge said. “The Arkansas Department of Health will not ask for your Social Security informatio­n or demand a payment when reaching out about contact with positive cases of covid-19.”

Amanda Priest, a spokeswoma­n for the state Attorney General’s Office, said they received two calls related to possible scams involving contact tracing.

McNeill said Health Department investigat­ors may call from different phone numbers, but contact tracers will generally use 877-2726819, 833-283-2019 or 501-686-5875.

There is not one set time period for contact tracers to attempt to reach people, McNeill said.

People can verify that they have been contacted by a case investigat­or or contact tracer by calling 800-803-7847, she said.

The Attorney’s General Office has targeted two other possible scams related to covid-19.

The office issued an alert concerning the Hispanic population in Northwest Arkansas being targeted with an immunity boost as protection from the virus, Priest said. The person is told that he tested positive for the virus and then offered an immunity boost for $3,000, Priest said.

Priest said the office also has filed a lawsuit against televangel­ist Jim Bakker concerning deceptive trade practices for selling colloidal silver products as a cure for covid-19. The office claims that 385 Arkansans made $60,524 in purchases from Bakker’s company for colloidal silver products, according to a news release.

Bakker filed a lawsuit against the state, and a federal judge dismissed the case on Friday.

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