T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1119.1 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Thu Apr 04 1996 18:01 | 8 |
| Since this was a collect call, the phone company should have the number
that it came from. Chances are this was a phone booth, but you never
can tell, some scam artists are not real bright. I don't know about
the laws in Kentucky, but here we have one on robbing from the elderly,
and it is possible the state the call came from has the same sort of
laws.
meg
|
1119.2 | | TLE::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Thu Apr 04 1996 18:12 | 8 |
| Pontiac, Illinois, eh? That's where the state penitentiary is (maximum
security prison).
And, to relate this to parenting, I visited that prison with my father when
I was junoir high age (dad was on the prison pardon and parole board) - what a
depressing place!
cheryl
|
1119.3 | Call the local police | AKOCOA::NELSON | | Thu Apr 04 1996 18:20 | 4 |
| Have your dad contact he local police department and/or the local
newspaper. Sadly, these kinds of scam operations seem to happen
every spring. Must be the warm weather bringing all the creeps out
of the woodwork.
|
1119.4 | PUblicity | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Fri Apr 05 1996 12:41 | 7 |
| Might be nice to send a letter to the editors of the AARP magazine,
warning others about the scam. Publicity does a heck of a lot more
than reporting to an official agency. I would think that the phone
company would care quite a bit, since it's using their equipment for
the possible commission of a crime, and if they are gracious enough to
remove the collect charges they could be losing $$$!
|
1119.5 | a family password might be preventative... | MROA::DCAMPBELL | | Fri Apr 05 1996 13:38 | 5 |
| For the future, if you're nervous, set up a password with your
parents. We've done this for other reasons. It may be a good way
to separate the scams from the real emergencies.
Diana
|
1119.6 | | DANGER::ARRIGHI | | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:38 | 8 |
| Why not call up the postmaster in Pontiac Illinois and report it? When
people rent a PO box they have to show proof of address when filling
out the registration card, and this goes on the card. This is a
federal matter that the Post Office SHOULD be concerned about, but you
probably will not get much concern from the average clerk at the
counter.
Tony
|
1119.7 | phone | STRATA::BARROWS | | Sat Apr 06 1996 12:35 | 15 |
|
The phone companies will not have the # the call was made from.
Especially if it was a collect call. If the phone companies had all
that info. , people would never prank call, etc...
In order to have a call traced, you have to call the phone company,
and the police station must also be involved. The phone company has to
call the police and advise them that they are installing a tracer on
the telephone line. You have to request this.
The only #'s that the phone company can provide you with, is what's
on your phone bill. Collect calls(atleast on my bill) show up as my
phone#, and any #'s I call from my phone.
$.02 KT
|
1119.8 | | CONSLT::CHRISTIE | | Mon Apr 08 1996 11:13 | 11 |
|
Did this guy know your first name? I'd be interested in how he
got that info. For future use isn't there a service through the
phone company that tells you the number that called you? I thought
it was called caller id or something.
The reason I ask if he knew your name is because that would be rather
hard to get other than thru a personal knowledge of the family.
Barbara
|
1119.9 | | DECWIN::MCCARTNEY | | Mon Apr 08 1996 11:24 | 9 |
| re: .8
"The reason I ask if he knew your name is because that would be rather
hard to get other than thru a personal knowledge of the family."
or the phone book, or by buying a mailing list...
Irene
|
1119.10 | Name changes | ALFA2::PEASLEE | | Mon Apr 08 1996 12:39 | 5 |
| Re: .9 Actually if there was a name change through marriage, then it
would be difficult to derive the familial relationship through the
phone book or via a mailing list.
Nancy
|
1119.11 | | CONSLT::CHRISTIE | | Mon Apr 08 1996 14:02 | 9 |
|
I was wondering how someone would get the children's first names
actually. That's not info you'd get from a phone book. I wouldn't
think this would work to well unless they knew at least a little of the
family's history. But who knows, I bet they can be pretty clever at
extracting info from unsuspecting elders.
Barbara
|
1119.12 | voice | MAIL1::LOCOVARE | | Tue Apr 09 1996 10:48 | 3 |
|
Wouldn't your parent know your voice?
|
1119.13 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Tue Apr 09 1996 11:47 | 8 |
| Older parents can be quite deaf, at least mine is, and she has crossed
me up with one of her friends on more than one occaision.
I hate to say this, but with older parents, sometimes it might not be a
bad idea to have a "password," just as I have for my daughter if
someone she doesn't know is to pick her up in an emergency.
|
1119.14 | | SUBPAC::OLDIGES | | Tue Apr 09 1996 11:48 | 46 |
|
Thanks for the input.
Re: .2
Very interesting that you mentioned that there is a prison in Pontiac
Ilinois. Perhaps the call was made from inside the slammer from a
person with too much time on his hands?
Re: .7
You could be right about the number not showing up on the phone bill
but my father got the impression from the phone company that his bill
would indicate a collect call was made. Whether the number from which
the call was made will be on the bill is yet to be seen. A quick call
to NYNEX indicated that the number will appear on the bill (sooner or
later), even though it might take up to 2 months for it to appear.
I would guess that it would be similar with Cincinnati Bell.
Re. .8
This person did not know my first name and I am not even sure he
knew my family name. He simply acted as if he were me. The operator
said that there was a collect call from "your son" and my dad took it.
When the person started talking, the person was mumbling at which point
my dad said something like "Is that you, Phil?", feeding him enough
information to continue the scam. It is still a mystery where this
person got my dad's phone number, or if it was simply a lucky guess.
I found out the following since I posted .0
Since this fellow did not use the mail to scam, the postal service has
no jurisdiction. They can only deal with mail fraud and the like.
The FBI wouldn't get involved because the total amount for the scam is
too little (only a few hundred dollars). According to the FBI, the
Attorney General of each State would be the one to contact, but as my
father has seen, the AG in Kentucky doesn't seem too interested.
In the meantime, I found an organization that is interested. It is the
National Fraud Information Line at (800)876-7060. They claim to
distribute information on these types of scams to the correct
organizations who can then follow up on it.
Phil
|