Message received from (443) 252-8587: "Hello, this important message is solely intended for [name said by mechanical voice:] Hammer2Scammers. The office of Recovery Solutions Group would like to address a returned check that you have authorized and submitted over to a financial institution. We will notify your employer to request immediate assistance with the court to possibly execute a bank lien against you for services rendered. Please contact our agency regarding this urgent matter at (844) 782-2214. Please reference your case number "behhh" [strange noise] [long pause, then alleged "case number" said by mechanical voice:] (some BS case number). Mr. or Mrs. [another pause, then name said by mechanical voice:] Hammer2Scammers [another long pause, then a beep], you have officially been notified. Please govern yourself accordingly."
BWAHAHAHAHA!! Oh, where to start...I haven't written a physical check in well over a decade, and I have records of all electronic checks. They have all been satisfied. Moreover, I used them to pay for goods, not services.
This appears to be a scam. It looks like they're just trying to get people on the phone so they can intimidate them into forking over money.
Wow, I've heard "you have officially been notified" before from these scammers, but "please govern yourself accordingly" is a new one for me!! They're getting creative.
That aside, this is just a jumble of intimidating words that aren't really saying anything. Generally speaking, one's employer would not be contacted about a lien. A lien is a right to keep possession of property belonging to another person until a debt owed by that person is discharged. Usually, employers don't have possession of employees' physical property. Salaries are not included in liens, they are included in garnishments. Those who repossess vehicles generally wouldn't involve employers, as they could easily tip off their employees. This is just silly, it's like they cut "scary" words out of the dictionary, jumbled them up, and used them to play a game of Mad Libs.
PLEASE KEEP THE FOLLOWING IN MIND: Legitimate debt collectors send letters detailing the alleged debt, and you have 30 days from the date of receipt to respond to the letter and request more information. REMEMBER THAT: Do NOT just send money to someone threatening you over the phone. By law, they have to send you a letter.
**It is their job to prove you owe the alleged debt, it is not your job to prove that you don't owe it.**
Source: I work in the legal field.
Recovery Solutions Group
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Message received from (443) 252-8587: "Hello, this important message is solely intended for [name said by mechanical voice:] Hammer2Scammers. The office of Recovery Solutions Group would like to address a returned check that you have authorized and submitted over to a financial institution. We will notify your employer to request immediate assistance with the court to possibly execute a bank lien against you for services rendered. Please contact our agency regarding this urgent matter at (844) 782-2214. Please reference your case number "behhh" [strange noise] [long pause, then alleged "case number" said by mechanical voice:] (some BS case number). Mr. or Mrs. [another pause, then name said by mechanical voice:] Hammer2Scammers [another long pause, then a beep], you have officially been notified. Please govern yourself accordingly."
BWAHAHAHAHA!! Oh, where to start...I haven't written a physical check in well over a decade, and I have records of all electronic checks. They have all been satisfied. Moreover, I used them to pay for goods, not services.
This appears to be a scam. It looks like they're just trying to get people on the phone so they can intimidate them into forking over money.
Wow, I've heard "you have officially been notified" before from these scammers, but "please govern yourself accordingly" is a new one for me!! They're getting creative.
That aside, this is just a jumble of intimidating words that aren't really saying anything. Generally speaking, one's employer would not be contacted about a lien. A lien is a right to keep possession of property belonging to another person until a debt owed by that person is discharged. Usually, employers don't have possession of employees' physical property. Salaries are not included in liens, they are included in garnishments. Those who repossess vehicles generally wouldn't involve employers, as they could easily tip off their employees. This is just silly, it's like they cut "scary" words out of the dictionary, jumbled them up, and used them to play a game of Mad Libs.
PLEASE KEEP THE FOLLOWING IN MIND: Legitimate debt collectors send letters detailing the alleged debt, and you have 30 days from the date of receipt to respond to the letter and request more information. REMEMBER THAT: Do NOT just send money to someone threatening you over the phone. By law, they have to send you a letter.
**It is their job to prove you owe the alleged debt, it is not your job to prove that you don't owe it.**
Source: I work in the legal field.
Brittany Walker called me on a fake message, calling on an old debt that is way past the statute of limitations and that has been sold to like 4 different collection agencies.
scam - Brittany Walker, different person, same name every time... scam
Robo Threat calls with many demands, don't know them.