Nevada
Scammer impersonates real-life Las Vegas Valley officer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – A Las Vegas Valley man warns of a scheme where a scammer impersonates a real-life local officer and warns of a court date before an actual Nevada judge.
FOX5 has told you about numerous scams where criminals impersonate law enforcement. Matthew Kadish explains how this criminal did research to ensnare victims.
“I wanted to get the word out about it, because I think that this is a scam that a lot of people could legitimately fall for,” Kadish said.
After his wife received a message from an officer impersonator about a “legal matter,” Kadish did an online search for his name: it matched an actual officer who works in a law enforcement agency in the Las Vegas Valley.
Kadish called the officer impersonator back.
“The guy spoke with a lot of authority. He kind of sounded like a like a police officer. This guy claimed to be this Clark County Sheriff’s deputy,” Kadish said, noting the man had obtained plenty of personal information about him.
“He gave these citation numbers… he basically said that his job was to facilitate court appearances. He said that there was a bench warrant out for my arrest and the judge in the case had given me two citations: one was failure to appear for a federal jury panel and the other was contempt of court,” Kadish said.
If Kadish paid the fines in a surety bond, he could appear in court the next day in a judge’s courtroom, the scammer said. The impersonator even used the name of an existing Nevada judge.
Kadish stayed on the phone call. He told the officer impersonator that he would head straight to the local police station to clear up any outstanding fines.
“He says, ‘I was just informed by our financial department that the digital coin kiosk at our Sheriff’s Office and in our lobby is out of order. I’m going to need you to go to this other location and use their digital coin kiosk.’ This is where my alarm bells really started to ring,” Kadish said.
“I was like, ‘I don’t feel comfortable doing this… I’m going to have my lawyer meet me down at the station. Lock me up. I’m not paying this thing, I’m going to go down there and straightening this out,’” Kadish said.
When Kadish arrived at a local Las Vegas Metropolitan Police station, the staff members told him they had no record of any warrant; the caller was a scammer. They urged him to file a report.
LVMPD released the following statement:
MORE: Nevada State Police issues DMV scam alert warning
LVMPD recently alerted the public about a text message scam claiming a traffic fine from “Las Vegas Courts.” Police call the text a “smishing” scam and advise to not click suspicious links, share personal or financial information, or make payments via unknown sites. Always verify directly through official court websites.
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