L.A. Agency Watches Y2K Schemes
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Still feel underserved by consumer help lines? Wait, there’s more.
This week, the Los Angeles Department of Consumer Affairs joined with the city’s Police Department to announce a new toll-free number to handle questions and complaints about Y2K-related frauds. Calls to the number, (888) 355-4Y2K, will be answered by consumer affairs officials, who will route cases to the LAPD for investigation. The city attorney’s Consumer Protection Unit will prosecute the cases.
Common Y2K schemes include:
* Telemarketing come-ons urging consumers to take their money out of banks because of potential computer glitches and to invest it instead in stock, metals or collectibles schemes.
* Investments in nonexistent companies or products touted as fixes for the Y2K bug or useless programs sold as fixes.
* Calls from bogus bank or credit card company employees, who get consumers’ account information by telling them they need to transfer it to Y2K-safe files.
* “Trojan Horse” computer-fixing schemes, in which businesses hire unscrupulous programmers who promise to fix Y2K problems, but instead steal data or privileged files.
* Price gouging on survival supplies such as water, candles, communications devices and “guaranteed” supplies of fuel and food in case of a Y2K meltdown.
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