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Called me in Alaska on my cellphone today while I was at work. I lived in Vegas for a while so I thought it was legitimate. Since I was working, I let it roll to voice mail. He didn't leave a message. I called back just now and got a "Hello, Hello, Hello" voice mail recording. The voice sounded like a male. Then the Nextel Voice mail prompt gave me an automated message saying "The subscriber your trying to reach is not accepting messages at this time" It was either a Nextel or Boost (Nextel subsidiary) voice mail prompt. Having worked in technical support for Sprint/Nextel, Verizon, and ma bell AT&T over the years (until my job was outsourced to India), I am for certain it was that particular voice mail system prompt. 1) Telemarketers are not allowed to call cellular phones (bill collectors can if you gave them the number). 2) The do not call list does work with legitimate companies. These guys are crooks not legitimate 3) He best not call me again or I will report him to the Las Vegas Police Department or the FBI since its interstate criminal activity its a federal crime. Then again I am sure they wouldn't do much. I bet they get plenty of complaints daily about idiots like this. Its obvious this is a criminal trying to get innocent people's credit card information so he can do something fraudulent. NEVER GIVE OUT YOUR CREDIT CARD NUMBER TO SOMEONE CALLING YOU.
card member services
want to lower my interest rate