News1 min ago
Daughter And Hmrc Scam
27 Answers
The scammers are still going strong, so this is a warning.
My daughter who is very savvy, took a phone call this afternoon from a very official sounding man saying he was calling about an outstanding tax bill of £4000.00. He said he was from HMRC.
She was alone in the house with just her twins and began to panic. He was threatening that she would be hauled to court and if she lost the case, with her lawyers fees and costs she could lose £40,000.00.
Luckily for her, her mother-law arrived, and after the ensuing barking etc from her Labrador, the guy put his phone down. My daughter was in floods of tears by this point and when she told her MIL what it was all about, she said straightaway that it was a scam.
The guy rang back and was still trying to get information from her, after getting her NI Number but she told him where he could stick his HMRC.
My daughter was totally taken in, so imagine an elderly person taking a phone call like this. It doesn’t bear thinking about.
Beware.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Talking of scams, just got this and I’ve never placed any orders with top shop
http:// www.upl .co/upl oads/67 4711DD3 C634EBC A217E3F D0EB28B 1215839 47780.j peg
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///Wouldn't it be possible for the banks to set up fake bank account details that could be given out to cold callers. That might then provide a link to the fraudster.///
A good idea on the surface, but how are you going to circulate details of the account without the scammers finding it out too. Unless the bank set up a different fake account for every real one, and keep it confidential between the two. But even then the bank is probably powerless unless the fraudulent account is in the same country. Furthermore our pathetic Judiciary would probably regard this as entrapment so unprosecutable.
A good idea on the surface, but how are you going to circulate details of the account without the scammers finding it out too. Unless the bank set up a different fake account for every real one, and keep it confidential between the two. But even then the bank is probably powerless unless the fraudulent account is in the same country. Furthermore our pathetic Judiciary would probably regard this as entrapment so unprosecutable.
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