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Scammers using texts to target unemployment benefits

This screenshot from the Federal Trade Commission shows the kind of alarming texts people are receiving from scammers trying to steal their unemployment benefits. Click to enlarge. (Courtesy Federal Trade Commission)

You look on your phone and see an urgent text that says: 鈥淲e鈥檝e noticed there鈥檚 an error in your unemployment claim. Click on this link.鈥 Do not click on that link because it鈥檚 probably a scam.

that identity thieves are targeting millions of people nationwide with scam phishing texts to steal their personal information 鈥 and their unemployment benefits.

Fraudulent unemployment claims by organized crime rings using stolen identities across the country. In June, that it鈥檚 flagged 1.3 million fraudulent claims since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

The FTC said that criminals are sending out millions of alarming text messages from what appears to be a state workforce agency. If you click on the link in the text to 鈥渧erify鈥 your information or fix your claim, you鈥檒l be taken to a website that may indeed look like your state鈥檚 workforce website.

But if you enter personal information such as a Social Security number, you may have your identity 鈥 and your benefits 鈥 stolen.

The FTC said that state agencies do not send text messages asking for personal information. If you receive an unsolicited text or email message that looks like it鈥檚 from your state, do not reply or click any links.

If you think you may have entered your personal information into a fraudulent website, the FTC suggests visiting to find out how to make it harder for an identity thief to misuse that information.

You can report a suspicious text or email to the National Center for Disaster Fraud by completing a . You can call the center at 866-720-5721 or email the FTC via the website as well.

The agency recommends telling friends about your experience to help others avoid the same scam.

草莓传媒鈥檚 Chris Cruise contributed to this report.

Anna Gawel

Anna Gawel joined 草莓传媒 in 2020 and works in both the radio and digital departments. Anna Gawel has spent much of her career as the managing editor of The Washington Diplomat, which has been the flagship publication of D.C.鈥檚 diplomatic community for over 25 years.

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