Anonymous wrote:RESOLUTION
Today, I received mail for the deceased parent of the person whose mail I received yesterday.
I googled and found the names of the parent's adult children in his obituary. One of them was the person whose mail I received yesterday.
I called the person's mobile number. That's faster than dealing with Wells. He said money was stolen from his checking account. He said he recently changed the address from my address back to his address. That explains why I am receiving these "change of address" postcards.
He asked if I was from [insert my town name]. He said they suspect the person had the debit card sent to my house and then stole the debit card when it showed up.
I've frozen my own credit at the bureaus just to be safe, and I've started changing the few paper statements we receive to "online only."
I'll assume whoever stole the debit card also stole our own mail and am checking my accounts.
OP
Anonymous wrote: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
Well now you know what the scam was.
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:Anonymous wrote:Can you take the address change notification to the post office and have it returned to sender?
This address change notification did not come from the Postal Service. It came from the bank.
Anonymous wrote:I totally would NOT try to sort this out by telephone, too hard to know if one is talking to a fraudster or not.
I would take his papers in person to his bank -- and I would NOT tell them I also bank there -- and suggest their Fraud Dept look into the matter.