Grandparent Scam Phone Numbers in Washington, DC

In the grandparent scam, a caller impersonates a grandchild in trouble — arrested, in an accident, or stranded overseas — and asks for immediate money to be wired or sent via gift card. A second caller then poses as a lawyer or bail bondsman to add credibility. Victims are told to keep everything secret from other family members. 1,141 grandparent scam phone numbers reports have been filed by Washington residents. In District of Columbia, residents filed 16,860 fraud reports last year totalling $30 million in losses (FTC Consumer Sentinel).

How this scam works in Washington

Red flags Washington residents have reported

What to do if you get this call in Washington

  1. Hang up and call your grandchild directly on their actual number
  2. Call another family member to verify the emergency before sending any money
  3. Do not follow instructions to keep the call secret
  4. Report to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and local police

Report grandparent scam phone numbers in Washington to the DC Office of the Attorney General at https://oag.dc.gov/consumer-protection, and federally at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

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