Skip to content

Residents warned about tax scam

Callers tell victims they owe government money and have to pay up immediately
11038268_web1_170614-LAT-fake-tax-collector-scam

A tax scam RCMP previously warned residents about is back.

More than 30 Red Deer residents reported calls from scammers who claiming their targets owe money to Revenue Canada. The fraudsters demand payment in untraceable wire transfers, gift cards, Steam cards (an online game), pre-paid credit cards or bitcoin.

The scam, which cropped up last December, has many variations. Sometimes, pre-recorded messages are used and other times a live caller phones repeatedly and continues to increase the level of their threats of arrest or deportation in ongoing attempts to pressure their victims into sending money.

“Several recent files saw the scammers call back after successfully victimizing Red Deerians once, telling them they owed even more money,” said RCMP on Thursday.

One Red Deer complainant reported that their phone display showed the Red Deer RCMP complaint line number, and that the scammer claimed to have a warrant from the Alberta RCMP for their arrest.

“This false use of a legitimate name or phone number is commonly used by scammers – it’s called number spoofing,” say police.

Residents should be mindful of these facts:

•Even if you do owe money to Canada Revenue Agency, they do not accept payment in gift cards, by wire transfer or by bitcoin. No legitimate agency does.

•Any legitimate caller will encourage you to call back independently to verify their claim. Do not call back to a number the caller gives you. Look up Canada Revenue Agency or the appropriate agency and call them yourself.

•If police call you, they will give you verifiable facts including a file number and their name and rank. If you get a threatening phone call claiming to represent police and asking for money, ask for those verifiable facts, hang up and call your local police detachment to check.

•Remember that scammers frequently use “number spoofing” to make it look like their call is coming from a legitimate organization.

If you receive a call from a tax scammer, you do not need to report it to police unless you have fallen victim to their scam. Just hang up the phone. These scammers are usually located outside of Canada, making it impossible for RCMP to locate them.

“Red Deer RCMP urge people to ask questions, be skeptical of phone calls from anyone who is demanding money, and to educate themselves about these very common scams,” says Red Deer RCMP Cpl. Karyn Kay.

“Check your facts and do your research, and be alert to red flags such as anyone demanding payment through gift cards or pre-paid credit cards. Then, when you get a call from a scammer, hang up and ignore them.”

Learn more about how to recognize and protect yourself from fraud at www.antifraudcentre.ca.



News tips

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter