Office of the Maine Attorney General

Scams

As a general rule, all scams have similar traits. This page outlines some obvious ones that raise red flags. For latest alerts about trending scams, visit our Consumer Scam and Alert Notices page. For information about scams that can hurt your immigration case, visit our Immigration Scams and Protecting New Mainers page. For information about issues particularly affecting older people, see our Older Mainers page.If you would like to file a complaint or question about a business and request mediation, please submit an online File a Complaint About a Business form or contact us.

You are contacted out of the blue. Anyone who calls, emails, send you a letter, texts or comes to your dooryard out of the blue may not have your best interest at heart. You don't have to respond right away, make a decision or even answer the door.

You have to send money up front in order to receive a prize. You haven't won anything if you have to pay for it.

You need to send money via wire transfer or a reloadable card. This is frequently the preferred way for scammers to ask for money. Remember, this is just like sending someone cash - you'll never see it again.

You are asked for personal or financial information. Never provide your personal information (DOB, SSN, etc.)or bank account information to someone you don't know. Your bank or credit card company will not call and ask to confirm any account or personal details they already have on file. Anyone asking for this information out of the blue is trying to scam you.

Don't tell anyone. Scammers want to keep you under their spell. If you tell family and friends, someone may ask dissuade you from interacting with them. If you're asked to keep it a secret, it is a scam.

ACT NOW! If an offer is really good, it can wait for you to sleep on it and get back to them tomorrow. Too many times though, scams have to be acted on today only. We advise you to be slow to say yes and quick to say no.

You get a real looking check. If you get a check and are asked to send money back, it's a scam. If you really think you've come upon unexpected good fortune, take your check to the bank and ask them to verify whether it is real.

Always listen to your gut. If it sounds too good to be true, it is.