When sending Fraud Reports to doshelp@doshelp.com Please make sure
of the following, or your report will be of no value to me. If you
need help submitting write me
and I will help you.
Disclaimer:
DoShelp.com is in no way associated or endorsed by the company/institution
described on this page. The purpose of this page is to educate
consumers using actual fraud letters collected. In addition
this page serves as a resource to report suspected fraudulent
e-mails/websites targeting this company/institution. That
information is then used to contact the hosting ISP and request removal of
the material reported. * all Trademarked, copyrighted names, logos
and other materials are property of their respective copyright/trademark
holders used here only for accurate depiction of fraudulent web sites
and/or e-mails.
* E-Mail Headers are
needed
* Forward the message as inline or
attachment
* NO Screen
captures or copy/paste of e-mail body
* When possible
view source of body and copy/send that.
I want to close these bad guys down as
much as you do, but without following these simple requests, valuable time
is lost in my efforts to accomplish this.
One final thing if you're in a position
to do so, I could sure use a little help with the costs involved in this
effort visit my donations
page. Every little bit shows me it's worth it.
If you receive any suspected SCAM e-mail
from The Internet Fraud Complaint Center (IRS) (examples below) please
report them By forwarding the message to doshelp@doshelp.com
with subject "IRS Fraud".
A new phishing attack posing as a tax
refund from the Internal Revenue Service is using a configuration
problem on the GovBenefits.gov Web site to fool users into thinking
they're safe in offering up personal information such as Social Security
and credit card numbers.
The fraud begins with an e-mail supposedly from the IRS, which claims
the recipient is owed a tax refund. In the message from "taxrefunds@irs.gov,"
a link is embedded to a site where recipients can supposedly collect the
refund.
This is not a legitimate e-mail from or
by the IRS. For more information about this scam e-mail and it's
associated websites see this:
From:
Internal Revenue Service [mailto:service@irs.gov]
Sent: Sunday, March 12, 2006 9:03 PM To:user@isp.com Subject: IRS Notification - Please Read
This . Importance: High
After the last
annual calculations of your fiscal activity
we have determined that you are eligible to
receive a tax refund of $63.80.
Please submit the tax refund request and
allow us 6-9 days in order to process it.
A refund can
be delayed for a variety of reasons. For
example submitting invalid records or
applying after the deadline.
To access the
form for your tax refund, please
click here
From:
Internal Revenue Service [mailto:admin@irs.gov]
Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2006 10:03
AM To: user@isp.com Subject: IRS Notification - Please Read
This .
After the last
annual calculations of your fiscal activity
we have determined that you are eligible to
receive a tax refund of $63.80.
Please submit the tax refund request and
allow us 6-9 days in order to process it.
A refund can
be delayed for a variety of reasons. For
example submitting invalid records or
applying after the deadline.
To access the
form for your tax refund, please
click here