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RoboKiller users have reported receiving spam
calls from this number
Negative
User reputation
Blocked
Robokiller status
Analytics
7 minutes ago
Last call
213,934
Total calls
2,394
User reports
Reported category
Health Insurance
Learn MoreComments 99
The comments below are user submitted reports by third parties and are not endorsed by Robokiller
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Clear match Medicare is in my contacts. I want the messages sent to my phone not to robo
January 26, 2024
This number is allowed but phone will not ring
December 6, 2023
Enrollment questions
November 21, 2023
Allow this caller
October 19, 2023
Junk
October 12, 2023
I don’t know them.
September 15, 2023
I don’t need any more insurance
August 2, 2023
2603ext
May 26, 2023
Allow call
March 9, 2023
Friend
February 9, 2023
Repeated calls
December 17, 2022
Marketer
December 2, 2022
Hawkers selling alternate medicare ins
December 1, 2022
Unknown
September 26, 2022
T****y female saying “hi thinking about you”
July 30, 2022
Thank you Robo killer
June 7, 2022
Legitimate company - Medicare Solutions. Not a scam, or spam call. In order to be removed from call list you MUST say “Put me on the do not call list,”
June 2, 2022
I don’t want it
May 20, 2022
STOP
May 12, 2022
Block always please
May 9, 2022
They just keep calling after I said no
May 5, 2022
Scam
April 12, 2022
Spam
April 8, 2022
Scam
April 6, 2022
Always handing up
March 10, 2022
Keep blocked
February 23, 2022
car insurance
January 30, 2022
Very nice and friendly person. However, not interested in any money re Medicare info.
January 18, 2022
I am sick and tired of people calling not leaving a message as requested. I’ve been scammed two times already I’m not gonna get scammed again
November 15, 2021
Unknown
November 4, 2021
From a fake website posing as a . gov web site
September 23, 2021
Block this
September 22, 2021
Block ok
September 10, 2021
scam block call
August 23, 2021
Please always block
August 18, 2021
I’m on the national do not call registry.
August 16, 2021
I think they were scared a little bit.
July 23, 2021
Block always. UNKNOWN !!!!!
July 19, 2021
Funny stuff
June 7, 2021
my care plus health plan
May 7, 2021
He wants to sell medical insurance. It is a robot
May 3, 2021
Nusance caller
April 26, 2021
spam/scam
April 7, 2021
D*******s
April 4, 2021
Scam
March 31, 2021
Fake "Medicare Health Center", "Medicare Options", "Medicare Rewards", "Senior Benefits", "Insurance Solutions", or "Insurance Enrollment Center" Medicare and life insurance scam by criminals phoning from the Philippines. This is a massive and widespread identity theft, health insurance, and Medicare healthcare scam by criminals calling from the Philippines using thousands of different spoofed phone numbers and mainly preying on seniors to steal your credit card number, Medicare and Social Security numbers, and personal information to commit Medicare fraud and identity theft under the pretense of saying that they will help you obtain health insurance, Medicare supplement plans, and life insurance. This Filipino scammer, with more women than men in their overseas phone room, asks for you by your name to sound like a personal phone call to gain your trust, but they are randomly auto-dialing everyone. Scammers use huge phone database listings of millions of names with phone numbers and addresses to have the autodialer display the name that is currently dialed. If you decline their fake scam, they sometimes threaten you, saying that you need their fake insurance or else you can be arrested or fined. This call center also runs a similar auto insurance scam, pretending to be either Allstate, Farmers, State Farm, or another fake name, and either trying to sell you fake car insurance or pretending to be fake debt collectors and saying your insurance payment is late. About 80% of North America scam calls come from India and 15% come from the Philippines. India scammers run hundreds of fraud, extortion, and money laundering scams every day such as posing as a fake pharmacy, fake Social Security officer saying your benefits are suspended, IRS officer collecting on fake unpaid back taxes, debt collector threatening you for fake unpaid bills, fake bank/financial/FedEx/UPS/DHL scams, pretending to offer fake health insurance, car warranty, student loan forgiveness, credit card and debt consolidation services, posing as Amazon to falsely say an unauthorized purchase was made to your credit card or your Prime membership was auto-debited from your bank, posing as Microsoft/Dell/HP/Apple to say your account has been hacked or they detected a virus on your computer, fake "we are refunding your money" or "your account has been auto-debited" scams, fake Google/Alexa listing and work-from-home scams, posing as an electric utility, Verizon, AT&T, or Comcast to say your service is suspended, fake solar panel and home purchase offers, fake fundraisers asking for donations, fake phone surveys, and the scammers try to steal your credit card, bank account/routing number, Social Security number, and personal information. A India call center may rotate through a fake Social Security, subscription auto-renewal, pharmacy, and credit card offer scam within one week. Philippines scammers focus more on Medicare and SSN/identity theft. Scammers use disposable VoIP phone numbers (e.g. MagicJack devices) or they spoof fake names and numbers on Caller ID. Anyone can use telecom software to phone with a fake CID name and number. Scammers spoof thousands of fake 8xx toll-free numbers. CID is useless with scam calls unless the scam asks you to phone them back. CID area codes are never the origin of scam calls since scams use spoofed CID numbers from across the US and Canada, numbers belonging to unsuspecting people, invalid area codes, and fake foreign country CID numbers; e.g. fake women crying "help me" emergency scams often spoof Mexico and Middle East CID numbers. Scammers often spoof the actual phone numbers of businesses such as Apple, Verizon, and banks to trick you into thinking the call is valid. How can you avoid being scammed by phone calls? NEVER trust any unsolicited caller who sells something (most unsolicited calls are scams so your odds of saving money are very poor); asks for your Social Security number; offers a free gift or reward; threatens you with arrest/lawsuit or says you need to reply back soon (pressure tactic); asks you to access a website, download a file, wire transfer money or buy prepaid debit/gift cards; claims suspicious activity on your account; says your subscription is being refunded or auto-renewed/auto-debited; and all pre-recorded messages. Recordings are far more likely to be malicious scams and not just telemarketer spam. All unsolicited callers with foreign accents, usually Indian or Filipino, are mostly scams. Filipino scammers tend to speak better English than Indian scammers. Filipinos speak English with a subtle accent having a slight trill. Scams often say that you inquired about a job, insurance, social security benefits, or that you previously contacted them or visited their website. A common India phone scam uses a fake Amazon recording about a purchase of an iPhone, but Amazon never robo-dials and Amazon account updates are emailed. Many banks use automated fraud alert calls to confirm a suspicious purchase, but always verify the number that the recording tells you to phone or just call the number printed on your credit card. Some scams ask for your credit card for purchase of their fake product or service. The scammer calls you back one day later to say their credit card machine is broken, so you must wire transfer the payment to them. After you have wired the money to them, they still overcharge your credit card after they change phone numbers, so they rob you twice before disappearing. Wire transfers and prepaid debit cards laundered through foreign bank accounts are untraceable. Scammers try to gain your trust by saying your name when they call, but their autodialer automatically displays your name or says your name in a recording when your number is dialed using phone databases that list millions of names and addresses. Scammers often call using an initial recording speaking English, Spanish, or Chinese that is easily generated using text-to-speech translation software to disguise the origin of their India phone room. Some speech synthesis software sound robotic, but others sound natural. To hide their foreign accents, some India scammers use non-Indians in their phone room. Scammers often use interactive voice response (IVR) robotic software that combines voice recognition with artificial intelligence, speaks English with American voices, and responds based on your replies. IVR calls begin with: "Hi, this is fake_name, I am a fake_job_title on a recorded line, can you hear me okay?"; or "Hi, this is fake_name, how are you doing today?"; or "Hello? (pause) Are you there?"; or "Hi, may I speak to your_name?" IVR quickly asks you a short question to elicit a yes/no reply so it hangs up if it encounters voicemail. IVR robots understand basic replies and yes/no answers. To test for IVR, ask "How is the weather over there?" since IVR cannot answer complex questions and it keeps talking if you interrupt it in mid-sentence. IVR usually transfers you to the scammer, but some scams entirely use IVR with the robot asking for your credit card or SSN. A common myth is IVR calls record you saying "yes" so scammers can authorize purchases just using your "yes" voice, but scammers need more than just a recorded "yes" from you - credit cards and SSN. Phone/email scams share two common traits: the CID name/number and the "From:" header on emails are easily faked, and the intent of scam calls is malicious just as file attachments and website links on scam emails are harmful. Scams snowball for many victims. If your personal/financial data are stolen, either by being scammed, visiting a malicious website, or by a previous data breach of a business server that stores your data, then your data gets sold by scammers on the dark web who will see you as fresh meat and prey on you even more. This is why some receive 40+ scam calls everyday while others get 0 to 2 calls per day. If you provide your personal information to a phone scammer, lured by fake 80%-discounted drugs or scared by fake IRS officers, you receive even more phone scams and identity theft can take years to repair. Most unsolicited calls are scams, often with an Indian accent. No other country is infested with pandemics of phone room sweatshops filled with criminals who belong to the lowest India caste and many are thieves and rapists who were serving jail time but released early due to prison overcrowding. Scammers often shout profanities at you. Just laugh at their abusive language. Google "Hindi swear words" and memorize some favorites, e.g. call him "Rundi Ka Bacha" (son of whore) or call her "Rundi Ki Bachi" (daughter of whore). Scammers ignore the National Do-Not-Call Registry; asking scammers to stop calling is useless. You do these scammers a favor by quickly hanging up. But you ruin their scams when you slowly drag them along on the phone call, give them fake personal and credit card data (16 random digits starting with 4 for Visa, 5 for MasterCard), ask them to speak louder and repeat what they said to waste their time and energy.
March 1, 2021
BLOCK
February 25, 2021
Blocked
February 7, 2021
?
January 20, 2021
Not in my health insurance call list
December 23, 2020
Why can this number not call through it says allowed. It’s an important number I need to be able to speak to them I’m about ready to cancel
November 25, 2020
my Medicare broker
November 2, 2020
I thought they were legit I gave them my phone number and I’ll get a call from them every five minutes from obviously a phone bank.
October 23, 2020
Junk
October 10, 2020
Thanks for blocking
September 17, 2020
Heavy breathing
September 15, 2020
madicade
September 14, 2020
Medicare
September 3, 2020
AOK/legitimate call!
August 11, 2020
Cold caller.
August 4, 2020
Medicare
July 25, 2020
block
June 18, 2020
please allow the call
June 15, 2020
Captured number from internet.
June 3, 2020
Wanted to talk
May 21, 2020
These people are incessant in there nagging! Medicare solicitation!
May 12, 2020
Medicaid related
April 13, 2020
mid gape !
April 9, 2020
This is my insurance company
March 20, 2020
Interested in knowing what it’s about.
March 19, 2020
Does this serves cost me extra each month?
March 3, 2020
Just not interested in this call
February 27, 2020
Threatening social security scam by foreigner with a thick accent
February 18, 2020
Fake health insurance scam call by madarchod criminals phoning from India This is a fake Medicare health insurance and healthcare scam call by criminals phoning from India, trying to steal your credit card number, Social Security number, and personal information. The India scammer often asks for you by your name in order to make the call sound like a personal phone call to gain your trust, but they are just auto-dialing thousands of numbers. It is easy to acquire huge phone database listings of millions of names associated with phone numbers and addresses and have the autodialer display the name that is currently dialed. If you decline their fake scam, they sometimes threaten you, saying that you need their fake insurance or else you can be arrested or fined, and many India scammers shout profanities and death threats at you. More than 95% of all North America phone scams originate from crowded phone rooms in India that rotate through hundreds of different fraud, extortion, and money laundering scams every day such as pretending to be a fake pharmacy, posing as fake Social Security officers saying your benefits are suspended or fake IRS officers collecting on fake unpaid back taxes or fake bill collectors threatening you for fake unpaid debts, pretending to offer fake health insurance, car warranty, and debt, student loan forgiveness, credit card consolidation services, posing as Amazon to falsely say that an unauthorized purchase was made to your account or that your Prime membership was auto-debited from your credit card or bank account, posing as Microsoft or HP to say that your software needs renewal or they detected a problem with your computer, fake "we are refunding your money" or "your account has been auto-debited" scams, fake Google/Alexa listing and work-from-home scams, pretending to be DHL, UPS, or a bank, falsely stating that they installed ransomware virus on your computer and you need to pay them money, etc, and the scammers try to steal your credit card, bank account and routing number, or Social Security number and personal information. Many scammers try to gain your trust by asking for you by your name when they call, but the autodialing software is just dialing thousands of phone numbers and automatically displaying your name when your number is dialed from a phone database that contains millions of names, numbers, and addresses in the U.S. Many India scammers now phone you with an initial pre-recorded robotic person speaking English, Spanish, or Chinese that is easily generated using text-to-speech translation software to disguise the origin of their India phone room, but then you speak to the India scammer when you take the bait and respond to the pre-recorded message. Scammers always either use disposable VoIP phone numbers (e.g. MagicJack devices) or they spoof fake Caller ID phone numbers. Anyone, including you, can use telecom software or a third-party service to phone using fake names and phone numbers that show up on Caller ID. India scammers often spoof fake toll-free Caller ID numbers that begin with "8". The Caller ID name and number is often useless with scam calls unless the scam setup asks you to phone them back and the Caller ID area code is almost never the area from which the scam call actually originated since many scams use fake area codes from across the U.S. and Canada, and also purposely faked foreign country Caller ID numbers (e.g. fake women crying "help me" emergency scams often use fake Mexico and Middle Eastern Caller ID numbers). Some India scammers also spoof the actual real phone numbers of businesses such as Apple, Verizon, and U.S. banks so when you phone the number back, you realize that you were scammed from the spoofed Caller ID number of the actual business. What is the best way to avoid being scammed by a phone call? Never trust any unsolicited caller or anyone who phones you with any kind of sales offer (more than 90% of unsolicited sales calls are scams so your odds of saving money are poor), any kind of legal or arrest threats, any claims of suspicious activity on an account, any claims of refunds or auto-renewed/auto-debited accounts, and any pre-recorded messages. Any unsolicited caller with a foreign accent (nearly always Indian) should immediately be treated as a scam until carefully proven otherwise. Phone and email scams snowball for many victims - if your personal or financial data is stolen, either through a phone or email scam, clicking on a malicious website, or by a previous data breach of a business server that stores your data, then your personal data gets shared and sold by scammers on the dark web who then prey on you even more. And that is one main reason why some people receive 40+ scam phone calls every day while others receive only 1 or 2 scam calls per day. Credit card numbers sell for $5 to $20 on the dark web, bank account numbers and email passwords sell for as much as $500, and Social Security numbers sell for $1 to $10 just for the number or more than $300 if the SSN includes full name, address, date of birth, and drivers license number. India scammers do not care about the U.S. National Do-Not-Call Registry and asking scammers to stop calling has no effect. I love to play with these scammers and keep them on the phone by pretending to be interested in their scam because many scam victims are the senile elderly. You do these scammers a favor by yelling at them and immediately hanging up. But you ruin their scams by slowly dragging them along on the phone call, calling them back if their phone number can be phoned, pretending to be interested in their product or service, pretending that you are worried when they threaten you, always giving them fake credit card numbers and fake personal information, asking them to speak louder and to repeat what they said to use up more of their energy, pretending to innocently ask the scum why he is shouting profanities at me, etc. The best defense against phone scammers is a good offense by not quickly hanging up the phone, but instead toying with them for at least 10 or 20 minutes to use up more of their time and energy so they have less time to deceive an elderly victim. Never give an unknown caller your credit card number or Social Security number. Companies who already have your information may ask for the last four digits for verification. Some India scammers ask for your bank account and routing number or ask you to wire transfer them a payment, giving a fake explanation that they cannot accept a credit card or personal check. This is an instant scammer alert because scammers can withdraw money if they know your bank account and routing number (e.g. counterfeit cashed checks) and illegal wire transfers are far less traceable than unauthorized credit card charges. India scammers may threaten to have you arrested, but the IRS, Social Security Administration, and debt collectors cannot threaten to arrest or sue you on the phone; they are required to send you paper notices by registered mail. The police and FBI also will never phone you and say that officers are coming to arrest you (many India extortions threaten to send officers); if the police really want to arrest you, they just show up with a warrant without phoning first. Some India scammers ask you to use your browser to visit a website that allows the scammer to directly access and control your computer and then they can install a ransomware virus to extort money from you, or they ask you to download a virus file to your computer. If the scam sounds very authentic, ask the scammer for their verifiable company name, street address, and a callback number that can be searched and matched to the company name and address, which all real businesses will provide. Every Indian scammer will immediately fail this test since they all use spoofed fake Caller ID numbers or VoIP numbers that they quickly dispose of. Never trust any unsolicited call because they are mostly scammers, usually with a slight or strong Indian foreign accent, and most scam calls originate from India. No other foreign country is infested with numerous noisy sweatshops filled with phone scam criminals who belong to the lowest India caste and many are thieves, robbers, and rapists who were serving jail sentences but released early due to prison overcrowding. Most India scammers are men, but many are women who also readily shout profanities. Just laugh at them. Google "Hindi swear words" and memorize some favorites to piss on these scammers, e.g. call him "Rundi Ka Bacha" (son of a whore) or call her "Rundi Ki Bachi" (daughter of a whore).
February 17, 2020
Medicare
December 30, 2019
Medicare Solutions
December 11, 2019
A man trying to get me to answer him by making a deal saying he didn't want to loose his job by helping me. Really shady!
December 3, 2019
Medicare plans
November 29, 2019
I am shopping for Medicare coverage and expect several calls over the next couple of weeks. Please allow these calls until November 30.
November 18, 2019
trying to sign you up for Medicare supplement insurance
October 11, 2019
Scam
September 20, 2019
I told them when to contact me on 28 Sept 2019 when I return to the USA. They do not stop calling every hour of every day
September 20, 2019
It’s about Medicare insurance
September 13, 2019
Medical salesperson
August 21, 2019
Lodged a complaint with dncr
July 25, 2019
government offoces should not tell someone to p**s off
July 11, 2019
They call at all hours of the night. I received this call at 11:27pm. I was woke up for nobody to be responding I turned Robokiller on.
June 9, 2019
Medicare
June 3, 2019
MEDICARE
May 10, 2019
Spam block!!!!!!!
April 28, 2019
they have been continuously calling me asking for me by name I want them stopped!
April 23, 2019
Could not understand anything
April 23, 2019
Medicare solutions
April 23, 2019
Thankyou
April 19, 2019
He used bad language calling the recording a smart a**.
April 1, 2019
Medicare “businesses” trying to make money off gimmicks.
March 30, 2019
nuts
March 30, 2019
Insurance sales
March 21, 2019
Medical insurance Medicare
January 7, 2019