So I’ve been getting these letters from the DOJ. In it it basically says I may have been a victim of a crime and to contact them for a class action lawsuit.
The letter doesn’t say what the lawsuit is about which is annoying.
Anyway, I just blew it off thinking if it pays off it would probably be for like $20 or something. Not really worth my time.
But these guys keep sending me letters. They REALLY want to hear from me I gather.
I just don’t understand why they want to hear from me so bad.
I’m assuming this is your interpretation, because criminal acts are not prosecuted in lawsuits. But the Department of Justice does undertake lawsuits for non-criminal violations of law, so that can make sense.
My thought, exactly. This sounds SO fake. It’s so easy to take a picture of an official letterhead, insert it onto the top of a blank word page, and fill in your bullshit below. Dollars to donuts it’s a phishing scam.
As a humorous side note, I have been a winner in exactly one class action suit. I received a check for $0.37. Yep, that’s ZERO dollars and thirty-seven cents. LOL
By the way, I did deposit it. I figured if 5 million people got a check for $0.37, laughed at it, and then threw it out, it would save the bad guys a ton of money. Not on my watch! LOL
Yeah, the Victim Notification Program (not Center) is a real thing maintained by the DOJ. I did find one hit for “Victim Notification Center” which appears to reprint a collection of press releases about compensation for fraud.
So this is might be legit government spam, in a scenario where they’re going after some criminal operator and they’re trying to gather all the possible victims based on available records of people who might be connected to the business in question. Is there a phone number in the letter? The official number on the DOJ website is 1-866-365-4968 (1-866-DOJ-4YOU). If that’s the number, then this might not be a scam.
The Office of Justice Programs’ Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) has received multiple reports that individuals claiming to represent the Department of Justice are calling members of the public as part of an imposter scam. The department strongly encourages the public to remain vigilant and not to provide personal information during these calls, which appear to target the elderly.
If in doubt, contact DOJ (look them up, don’t use info from the letter) and ask.