Protect Yourself and Report the Latest Frauds, Scams, Spams, Fakes, Identify Theft Hacks and Hoaxes
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Spammers are not just busy on the internet sending you junk email, or sending
you junk mail through the postal service, telemarketers are busy calling your
cell phone and home phone at all hours of the say and night (especially right at
dinnertime) to sell you products and services that you probably do not want nor
need, and are often overpriced, poor quality or a flat-out scam.
Are you bombarded by spam calls from various numbers that you do not recognoze, usually out of state, that
always say the same thing, and clearly it does not apply to you?
Here is a transcription of one below,
one we call the "Caroline with an Update on Your Business Loan" scam.
“Hello, this is Caroline calling with an update on your business loan. This is Caroline Brooks with the executive loan renew unit. I wanted to reach out because we've just finished reviewing your file and I do... "
This appears to be a widespread robocall scam where automated messages pose as a loan officer named "Caroline Brooks" from a fictitious "executive loan renew unit," claiming to offer or update a business loan approval (often around $239,000). It's not tied to a single legitimate company or source. Scammers use this script to trick people into calling back, and getting their victims to provide personal info, or falling for advance-fee fraud. Complaints date back months to mid-2025, with calls coming from spoofed out-of-state numbers that change frequently to evade blocks. And the numbers constantly change, so blocking them won't stop the calls.
This scam is documented on sites like the Better Business Bureau's Scam Tracker and robocall reporting platforms.
Similar reports appear on social media, like X from users getting daily calls with the same pitch.
Report the calls: File complaints to build a case for enforcement. Use the FTC's streamlined form at
donotcall.gov (for unwanted calls after registry) or reportfraud.ftc.gov (for scams). Also submit to the FCC at
consumercomplaints.fcc.gov. Include details like the script, numbers, and dates, reporting helps track patterns and may
lead to shutdowns.
Since numbers rotate, this won't stop all, but it reduces them over time.
Avoid pressing buttons, calling
back, or engaging—these confirm your number is active and can lead to more calls or data theft. If you've
shared info already, monitor your credit reports for free at annualcreditreport.com.
See these pages for guidance as applicable to your specific situation:
For a comprehensive list of national and international agencies to report scams, see this page.