Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
It's possible for multiple attorneys to have the same name. Is that linkedin profile in his email signature line or did you just Google his name?
That’s the thing. I only googled the number he called me from, without any names. And this LinkedIn profile with the same name came up.
Anonymous wrote:This guy sounds so shady. You are getting in more trouble by engaging with him. If they think they have a shot with you, I don't see him giving up on this scam. It's much safer to not reach out and block him all around. If he escalates, file a complaint with the state's disciplinary board. He cannot demand payment with blurry pdfs as his evidence. People counseling you otherwise must be scammers themselves or easy targets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
It's possible for multiple attorneys to have the same name. Is that linkedin profile in his email signature line or did you just Google his name?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
I think this sounds like a good idea, OP.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can actually ruin your credit over something like this. Not being proactive on it is really dumb, very dumb.
Eh doubt this guy is going to the agencies.
I never read unexpected email or answer unknown numbers as many people don’t. They need certified mail receipts to show a real notification was attempted.
Anonymous wrote:You can actually ruin your credit over something like this. Not being proactive on it is really dumb, very dumb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
The guy your are talking to is not the guy in the LinkedIn profile. The guy on the phone is spoofing the guy on the LinkedIn profile; he wants you to think that is who he is. It isn't. The guy on the phone probably isn't even in the US.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
My credit reports are clean.
I’m suspecting it’s a scam, but it’s weird that the guy is from a legit collections agency but has a LinkedIn profile where he’s a partner in a law firm. Very shady.
He did email me some blurry PDFs, but refused to mail the documents because USPS is not reliable.
I’ll contact HR on Monday and request payroll stubs.
I’ll ask him to provide all the evidence by certified mail or leave me alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can actually ruin your credit over something like this. Not being proactive on it is really dumb, very dumb.
How?
Anonymous wrote:You can actually ruin your credit over something like this. Not being proactive on it is really dumb, very dumb.