FBI Albuquerque
Office of Public Affairs
(505) 889-1300
February 9, 2018

FBI Media Alert: FBI Warns of Scam That Uses Purported Law Enforcement Credentials

The FBI is warning the public to be aware of a scam that uses a text message with a photograph of purported FBI credentials and threatens to arrest the person if money isn't sent.  

These text messages are false and the photograph of the credentials is not real. The FBI defines this type of scam as government impersonation fraud in which cyber criminals threaten to extort victims with physical or financial harm or the release of sensitive data.

The FBI wants to remind the public that federal law enforcement will not send photographs of credentials or badges to demand any kind of payment and that victims should not send any money to these cyber criminals.  

Anyone who feels they were the victim of this or any other online scam should report the incident immediately using the Internet Crimes Complaint Center’s (IC3) website at www.ic3.gov

In one instance reported in New Mexico this month, a victim said she received a Facebook message that claimed to come from the company's CEO. 

It informed her she had won a $800,000 prize. Subsequent cell phone text messages from different area codes told the victim to send money to cover taxes associated with her  apparent winnings. 

Other texts followed that claimed to be from the Internal Revenue Service and FBI.  The phony FBI text included a photograph that purported to be FBI credentials, which were fake. The message warned the victim she would be arrested if she didn't send money.

More information about government impersonation schemes and other online frauds can be found at https://pdf.ic3.gov/2016_IC3Report.pdf and www.fbi.gov.