Dodgy call or genuine??
Discussion
Hi folks,
Just received a phone call from a chap (very foreign accent) saying he works for a claims and compensation firm (not sure if I can post the name of the company he claimed he worked for due to forum rules).
This chap claimed to be calling about a road traffic accident involving someone resident to my address that occurred within the last three years. When questioned, he couldn't give me any more information other than it was logged to my address and this information came from the 'RTA Management'.
Now neither my wife nor myself have been involved in any sort of accident so I'm thing likely scam of some kind or just one of these compensation companies taking a rather strange approach to finding accident victims.
Any ideas wise people of PH?
Just received a phone call from a chap (very foreign accent) saying he works for a claims and compensation firm (not sure if I can post the name of the company he claimed he worked for due to forum rules).
This chap claimed to be calling about a road traffic accident involving someone resident to my address that occurred within the last three years. When questioned, he couldn't give me any more information other than it was logged to my address and this information came from the 'RTA Management'.
Now neither my wife nor myself have been involved in any sort of accident so I'm thing likely scam of some kind or just one of these compensation companies taking a rather strange approach to finding accident victims.
Any ideas wise people of PH?
Heathwood said:
Hi folks,
Just received a phone call from a chap (very foreign accent) saying he works for a claims and compensation firm (not sure if I can post the name of the company he claimed he worked for due to forum rules).
This chap claimed to be calling about a road traffic accident involving someone resident to my address that occurred within the last three years. When questioned, he couldn't give me any more information other than it was logged to my address and this information came from the 'RTA Management'.
Now neither my wife nor myself have been involved in any sort of accident so I'm thing likely scam of some kind or just one of these compensation companies taking a rather strange approach to finding accident victims.
Any ideas wise people of PH?
scamJust received a phone call from a chap (very foreign accent) saying he works for a claims and compensation firm (not sure if I can post the name of the company he claimed he worked for due to forum rules).
This chap claimed to be calling about a road traffic accident involving someone resident to my address that occurred within the last three years. When questioned, he couldn't give me any more information other than it was logged to my address and this information came from the 'RTA Management'.
Now neither my wife nor myself have been involved in any sort of accident so I'm thing likely scam of some kind or just one of these compensation companies taking a rather strange approach to finding accident victims.
Any ideas wise people of PH?
Cold calling from f
king ambulance chasers... Just like you will receive a text with compensation offer as soon as you post for sale ad with your number in it.
I hate them even more than I hate cab drivers and that means something!
OP - Please please WASTE THEIR TIME as much as you can. Pretend that you are interested, arrange meetings in the s
ttiest part of town and then don't show up etc.
king ambulance chasers... Just like you will receive a text with compensation offer as soon as you post for sale ad with your number in it.I hate them even more than I hate cab drivers and that means something!

OP - Please please WASTE THEIR TIME as much as you can. Pretend that you are interested, arrange meetings in the s
ttiest part of town and then don't show up etc. Edited by rottie102 on Saturday 22 January 15:52
Heathwood said:
Maybe I'm being thick but what's the scam?
He eventually gets your insurance details from you, and the card details you used to purchase the insurance to make sure that it was you that was indeed the purchaser and holder of the insurance, and then he transfers everything in your bank account / credit limit to a Pakistani bank account and you never hear from him again.Scam or not, its a cold call selling "where there's a blame, there's a claim".
Its an industry that makes my skin crawl - "you dont pay a penny, sir". No, I'm sure, direclty, I wont, but indirectly through increased insurance premiums (such as 40% rise this year) we all pay eventually.
Having had a week off this week, I'm disspaointed with the number of these ads that run through daytime TV.
Its an industry that makes my skin crawl - "you dont pay a penny, sir". No, I'm sure, direclty, I wont, but indirectly through increased insurance premiums (such as 40% rise this year) we all pay eventually.
Having had a week off this week, I'm disspaointed with the number of these ads that run through daytime TV.
Mastodon2 said:
Heathwood said:
Maybe I'm being thick but what's the scam?
He eventually gets your insurance details from you, and the card details you used to purchase the insurance to make sure that it was you that was indeed the purchaser and holder of the insurance, and then he transfers everything in your bank account / credit limit to a Pakistani bank account and you never hear from him again.Heathwood said:
Mastodon2 said:
Heathwood said:
Maybe I'm being thick but what's the scam?
He eventually gets your insurance details from you, and the card details you used to purchase the insurance to make sure that it was you that was indeed the purchaser and holder of the insurance, and then he transfers everything in your bank account / credit limit to a Pakistani bank account and you never hear from him again.
king thick.On the subject of scams, I've also had a lot of calls recently from a heavily accented chap (could be the same bloke for all I know) claiming to have had reports of slow internet connection / potential viruses on my home PC. I get rid of him pretty quickly but, similarly, I'm left wondering what his ultimate objective is.
Heathwood said:
On the subject of scams, I've also had a lot of calls recently from a heavily accented chap (could be the same bloke for all I know) claiming to have had reports of slow internet connection / potential viruses on my home PC. I get rid of him pretty quickly but, similarly, I'm left wondering what his ultimate objective is.
"Certainly sir, I can fix that for you for a one off charge, please can you tell me your name, address, credit card number, CVV number and expiry date. Thank you please"Heathwood said:
On the subject of scams, I've also had a lot of calls recently from a heavily accented chap (could be the same bloke for all I know) claiming to have had reports of slow internet connection / potential viruses on my home PC. I get rid of him pretty quickly but, similarly, I'm left wondering what his ultimate objective is.
Remote in, install keylogger, tell you its fixed, then wait for you to do some online banking/Credit card. Then has access to your accounts.Heathwood said:
Mastodon2 said:
Heathwood said:
Maybe I'm being thick but what's the scam?
He eventually gets your insurance details from you, and the card details you used to purchase the insurance to make sure that it was you that was indeed the purchaser and holder of the insurance, and then he transfers everything in your bank account / credit limit to a Pakistani bank account and you never hear from him again.Having said that, there's always the potential for some advanced fee shennanigans with the mouthbreathers... call it £50 non-refundable admin costs. Depending on how transparent they are with their fee and what the applicant is getting for it (i.e. probably a 'case review' then told it isn't worth chasing, for the majority), it could actually be a scam.
Gassing Station | General Gassing | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff



