Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait.
You nearly gave your account number to a bank you are not banking with? Or do you and this man share the same bank?
The stranger and I share a bank. For some reason, his info is coming to my address.
I called the bank (at their real number listed on their website), and they said they want my account number to fix it.
OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait.
You nearly gave your account number to a bank you are not banking with? Or do you and this man share the same bank?
The stranger and I share a bank. For some reason, his info is coming to my address.
I called the bank (at their real number listed on their website), and they said they want my account number to fix it.
OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call the bank from their website number (not the card you received) and tell them somebody's using your address for their account. Talk to their fraud people.
I have this happen all the time with my email - eg, billing statements sent to my email address for accounts I don't own - and it's impossible to fix: the vendors don't care. But for a home address and a bank account, I would hope they take it seriously.
The number on the postcard matches the number on the website.
OP
Anonymous wrote:Wait.
You nearly gave your account number to a bank you are not banking with? Or do you and this man share the same bank?
Anonymous wrote:Call the bank from their website number (not the card you received) and tell them somebody's using your address for their account. Talk to their fraud people.
I have this happen all the time with my email - eg, billing statements sent to my email address for accounts I don't own - and it's impossible to fix: the vendors don't care. But for a home address and a bank account, I would hope they take it seriously.
Anonymous wrote:I received an address change card from a major bank. The card listed the name of a stranger and said that they were writing to let the man know his credit card and two debit accounts had been updated to MY home address. The wording was unclear so they may have meant that my address was his old address.
This man never lived at my address. We know who lived here before, and he was not alive back then.
We have lived here so long, and there's no way he thought he lived here.
Is this guy scamming somehow? If so, what's the scam? He lives in Florida. I looked him up, and he has a somewhat unusual last name.
I called the bank and they said it's a simple fix, but they need my account number to do so. I didn't expect they would want to look up my account, so I didn't have it with me. I'll have to call back.
Do any of you know what might be going on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That doesn't make sense...why would they need your account number? What if was a bank where you didn't have an account? Are you calling a number that was on the notice? Check the bank's website and make sure you are calling the real number. I would also check your credit report and freeze it at all three bureaus....Everyone should do this anyway.
OMG!! I didn't even think that I was not really calling the bank!
OP
Anonymous wrote:That doesn't make sense...why would they need your account number? What if was a bank where you didn't have an account? Are you calling a number that was on the notice? Check the bank's website and make sure you are calling the real number. I would also check your credit report and freeze it at all three bureaus....Everyone should do this anyway.