A Free Public Service
August 13, 2024
SCAMS BULLETIN Host Jay White is an inactive attorney in San Mateo County, California.
UTILITY BARCODE SCAM
Attribution: US FTC.gov
Receiving an urgent call from what sounds like your utility company might make you think: Did I forget to pay my bill? The caller says there’s a way to avoid shutoff and fees: they’ll send you a barcode by text or email so you can pay at a local retailer like Walgreens, CVS, or Walmart.
Don’t respond. It’s all a lie. Wondering how to know it’s not a real utility company calling?
Scammers call unexpectedly and create a sense of urgency. But real utility companies don’t do that. Even if you owe money, they’ll work with you on a payment plan and won’t try to scare you into paying immediately — and they won’t send you a barcode and insist you take it to a store to pay.
Here’s how to deal with calls or messages that appear to come from your utility company:
Contact the utility company yourself. If you’re worried you might be behind on your bills, call the company using the number on your bill or the utility company’s website ― never call the number the caller gave you. It could lead you back to the scammer.
Scammers demand you pay a certain way. Scammers ask you to pay in a way that makes it hard for you to get your money back — wiring money, putting money on a gift card, using payment apps, paying with a scannable barcode or QR code, or cryptocurrency. Your utility company won’t demand you pay that way.
If you suspect you paid a scammer, act quickly. Contact the company you normally send the moneyto and tell them it was fraud. Ask for their help to reverse the payment. You might be able to recover some of your money.
Report utility company impersonators to your utility company and to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. #
