201-984-3763
NJ, US
Kathy Fitzpatrick
Kathy Fitzpatrick
2011-06-06 20:41:23
Unknown
1-12 calls daily. When I finally answered the call, the caller said I submitted something online about free money from the government! I told them there was no such thing. I guess I need to buy an airhorn and blow it into the phone! Very, very irritating!
Ms G
Ms G
2011-06-06 20:41:23
Unknown
I receive at least two calls a day on this phone. I didn't answer because I have come across with somebody who also complains about this number but though I don't answer it, it's very annoying.
Anybody, who can advise on how to stop this number from calling?
Thanks.
Mrs D
Mrs D
2011-06-06 20:41:23
Unknown
it's very annoying. they called about 10 times today
NANCY
NANCY
2011-06-06 20:41:23
Unknown
HATE THIS PEOPLE KEEP CALLING ME
Nancy
Nancy
2009-08-31 20:30:05
Unknown
Make them stop
Lady
Lady
2009-08-19 01:44:10
Unknown
I pick up the phone an hang-up yell in their ears!!
dee
dee
2009-08-18 19:48:45
Unknown
They wont stop calling.  I have told them to take me off their list but they still call at lease 15 - 20 times a day.
dee
dee
2009-08-18 19:44:04
Unknown
They wont stop calling and hanging up. I have repeatedly told them to take me off their call list.  They should not be able to get away with harrassing people. Make them Stop  PLEASE
pandora
pandora
2009-08-15 22:04:39
Unknown
I have gotten 25 calls today from this number. I called it back and pressed option 2 to be put on the do not call list. I asked the person on the other end to put me on the list this was last week.
MoM
MoM
2009-08-15 14:44:29
Unknown
Kept getting repeating phone calls, every 5 minutes to get my credit card number to purchase a so called government kit to apply for grants. Gave them hell but they kept calling.
Stu
Stu
2009-08-15 00:14:10
Unknown
This number called and a very gentlemen who spoke very poor English told me he had an approved government grant for me if I would just pay shipping of $1.95 charged to my credit card. I led him on for 20 minutes just to waste his time also, because this is a scam for sure, and then told him to burn my number and never call again bcause i am not buying anyting from any over the phone EVER!! I hung up. Within 1 minute a second call came in again from them. I hung up again. 30 seconds later a woman called from the exact same number wanting to know what my problem was. I told here that her and the scam operation she works for is my problem and I was reporting the calls to the Federal Trade Commission as harassment and had the caller ID to back it up. She promptly hung up on me.
Francesca
Francesca
2009-08-14 01:18:30
Telemarketer
Call every 20 minutes and every third call is a hangup. They ask for Francesca every time and after I said for the fourth time they have the wrong number I went along with it and upon asking questions about the grant and where the money came from they had no answers. I asked repeatedly to take my number off but the calls keep coming
JoJo
JoJo
2009-08-12 13:56:37
Unknown
every 15 mins all day every day I get calls from 201-984-3763 & 201-918-3055.  They don't leave messages so what I have been doing is picking up the phone when they call and leaving off the hook so I can tie up their line like they are tying up mine! seems childish but if they are going to continue to annoy me then I will annoy them.  :0)
jack
jack
2009-08-12 03:22:47
Unknown
grant research guide trying to get my bank info for my preapprove government grant that needed to ship out to my location.
LAMET
LAMET
2009-08-11 16:26:55
Unknown
thats because it a scam - If you search the internet on Grant Scams - you would know this.  

from consumeraffairs.com
Government Grant Scams
The "free money" scam has been around almost as long as the human species.
It has more variations than a bulldog has wrinkles but you can count on one thing: the government (any government) does not simply give money away to individuals. Anyone who tells you differently has larceny in his heart.
If you give him your bank account number, he will soon have your funds in his pocket.
It does no good to list all of the names used by these bunko artists because a.) they change all the time and b.) every single free-money government-grant offer is a scam. Period.
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2009/03/grant_scam_ads.html
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/scam_alerts/grant.html
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2009/03/ftc_stimulus_scam.html

FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION WEBSITE      
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/alerts/alt134.shtm

?Free Government Grants?: Don?t Take Them For Grant-ed
?Because you pay your income taxes on time, you have been awarded a free $12,500 government grant! To get your grant, simply give us your checking account information, and we will direct-deposit the grant into your bank account!?
Sometimes, it?s an ad that claims you will qualify to receive a ?free grant? to pay for education costs, home repairs, home business expenses, or unpaid bills. Other times, it?s a phone call supposedly from a ?government? agency or some other organization with an official sounding name. In either case, the claim is the same: your application for a grant is guaranteed to be accepted, and you?ll never have to pay the money back.
But the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation?s consumer protection agency, says that ?money for nothing? grant offers usually are scams, whether you see them in your local paper or a national magazine, or hear about them on the phone.
Some scam artists advertise ?free grants? in the classifieds, inviting readers to call a toll-free number for more information. Others are more bold: they call you out of the blue. They lie about where they?re calling from, or they claim legitimacy using an official-sounding name like the ?Federal Grants Administration.? They may ask you some basic questions to determine if you ?qualify? to receive a grant. FTC attorneys say calls and come-ons for free money invariably are rip offs.
Grant scammers generally follow a script: they congratulate you on your eligibility, then ask for your checking account information so they can ?deposit your grant directly into your account,? or cover a one-time ?processing fee.? The caller may even reassure you that you can get a refund if you?re not satisfied. In fact, you?ll never see the grant they promise; they will disappear with your money.
The FTC says following a few basic rules can keep consumers from losing money to these ?government grant? scams:
    Don?t give out your bank account information to anyone you don?t know. Scammers pressure people to divulge their bank account information so that they can steal the money in the account. Always keep your bank account information confidential. Don?t share it unless you are familiar with the company and know why the information is necessary.
    Don?t pay any money for a ?free? government grant. If you have to pay money to claim a ?free? government grant, it isn?t really free. A real government agency won?t ask you to pay a processing fee for a grant that you have already been awarded ? or to pay for a list of grant-making institutions. The names of agencies and foundations that award grants are available for free at any public library or on the Internet. The only official access point for all federal grant-making agencies is www.grants.gov.
    Look-alikes aren?t the real thing. Just because the caller says he?s from the ?Federal Grants Administration? doesn?t mean that he is. There is no such government agency. Take a moment to check the blue pages in your telephone directory to bear out your hunch ? or not.
    Phone numbers can deceive. Some con artists use Internet technology to disguise their area code in caller ID systems. Although it may look like they?re calling from Washington, DC, they could be calling from anywhere in the world.
    Take control of the calls you receive. If you want to reduce the number of telemarketing calls you receive, place your telephone number on the National Do Not Call Registry. To register online, visit www.donotcall.gov. To register by phone, call 1-888-382-1222 (TTY: 1-866-290-4236) from the phone number you wish to register.
    File a complaint with the FTC. If you think you may have been a victim of a government grant scam, file a complaint with the FTC online at www.ftc.gov, or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
September 2006


Feds: Scammers Falsely "Guaranteed" Government Grants
Court halts operators' deceptive pitches for grant writing book and services






By James Limbach
ConsumerAffairs.com
July 24, 2009

A federal judge has stopped an operation from falsely claiming that it could help consumers secure a "$25,000 Grant" -- guaranteed -- from the U.S. government.
The case is part of a Federal Trade Commission crackdown on scammers trying to capitalize on the economic downturn by targeting people facing financial hardship.
In the complaint the FTC, jointly with the attorneys general of Kansas, Minnesota, and North Carolina, charged that Grant Writers Institute, LLC and its related entities (together, GWI) falsely told consumers that they were eligible for grants as part of the recently announced economic stimulus package .
According to the complaint, the false and deceptive claims by GWI violate federal law, state consumer protection laws, and the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule. The complaint seeks a court order permanently stopping the defendants' illegal conduct and forcing them to return money to consumers injured by the scheme.
"Stamping out grant fraud and other types of schemes that take advantage of consumers in dire financial shape continues to be one of the Federal Trade Commission's highest priorities," said David Vladeck, Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection. "There is no such thing as a guaranteed grant. But to consumers in financial trouble, the chance for extra income -- guaranteed or otherwise -- can unfortunately be a huge draw."
The FTC says since at least 2007, GWI has mass mailed postcards to consumers across the country falsely claiming that the consumers "are Guaranteed a $25,000 Grant from the U.S. Government." Consumers who call the number are pitched a $59 book titled "Professional Grant Writer 'The Definitive Guide to Grant Writing Success.'"
The company's telemarketers falsely claim that the book will explain how to get government grants  -- including the "guaranteed" $25,000 grant. GWI and its North Carolina-based telemarketers, also named as defendants in the complaint, then call consumers who have bought the book, trying to get them to pay hundreds of dollars or more for grant research, writing, or coaching services, falsely claiming a 70 percent success rate in securing grant funding.
In reality, few, if any consumers ever receive any grant money.
The Commission contends that in addition to falsely claiming consumers were "guaranteed" to receive grants, GWI used the current government stimulus package to make its pitch. For example, when consumers called the number on the mass-mailed postcard, they heard a recording that said, "If you've been reading the papers you know that recently our government released $700 billion into the private sector. What you probably don't know is that there is another $300 billion that must be given away this year to people just like you."
The recording continues, "And if you're one of the lucky few who knows how to find and apply for these grants, you will receive a check for $25,000 or more, and we guarantee it . . . If you don't get a check for $25,000 or more, you pay nothing."
The following were named as defendants:
? Affiliate Strategies, Inc.;
? Landmark Publishing Group, LLC (d/b/a G.F. Institute and Grant Funding Institute);
? Grant Writers Institute, LLC;
? Answer Customers, LLC;
? Apex Holdings International, LLC;
? Brett Blackman, individually and as an officer, manager, and/or member of Affiliate Strategies, Inc., Landmark Publishing Group, LLC, Grant Writers Institute, LLC, Answer Customers, LLC, and Apex Holdings International, LLC;
? Jordan Sevy, individually and as a manager of Landmark Publishing Group, LLC;
? James Rulison, individually and as president of Answer Customers, LLC, all located in Kansas.
The complaint also names the following North Carolina entities as defendants:
? Real Estate Buyers Financial Network LLC (d/b/a Grant Writers Research Network);
? Martin Nossov, individually and as a manager and member of Real Estate Buyers Financial Network LLC; and
? Alicia Nossov, individually and as a manager and member of Real Estate Buyers Financial Network LLC.



Read more: http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2009/07 ... l#ixzz0NENGCoRV
Katie
Katie
2009-08-11 15:55:26
Unknown
Complaint on (201) 984-3763.  We asked them to remove our number from our calling list.  They still keep calling every 20 minutes.  When they first called, someone told us that we were "eligible for a government grant."  Besides the harassment (I just turned my phone off - the MagicJack can take it...This is why I only pay a $1.50 a month for phone service), I am concerned that these jerks could steal someone's identity, etc.  Looks like a scam to me...I forwarded it to the FCC.
1-282-726-2524 1-682-990-4157 1-619-761-5007
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