855-350-2509
Eric
Eric
2013-07-08 14:15:03
Telemarketer
I received a call from this number.  The caller asked if my business accepts credit cards.  I told him i don't even have a business this is a private number
Alfalfa
Alfalfa
2013-07-08 14:12:26
Unknown
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation's consumer protection agency, is warning consumers to be on the alert for scam artists posing as debt collectors. It may be hard to tell the difference between a legitimate debt collector and a fake one. Sometimes a fake collector may even have some of your personal information, like a bank account number. A caller may be a fake debt collector if he:

?is seeking payment on a debt for a loan you do not recognize;
?refuses to give you a mailing address or phone number;
?asks you for personal financial or sensitive information; or
?exerts high pressure to try to scare you into paying, such as threatening to have you arrested or to report you to a law enforcement agency.

If you think that a caller may be a fake debt collector:

?Ask the caller for his name, company, street address, and telephone number. Tell the caller that you refuse to discuss any debt until you get a written "validation notice." The notice must include the amount of the debt, the name of the creditor you owe, and your rights under the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
If a caller refuses to give you all of this information, do not pay! Paying a fake debt collector will not always make them go away. They may make up another debt to try to get more money from you.?Stop speaking with the caller. If you have the caller's address, send a letter demanding that the caller stop contacting you, and keep a copy for your files. By law, real debt collectors must stop calling you if you ask them to in writing.
?Do not give the caller personal financial or other sensitive information. Never give out or confirm personal financial or other sensitive information like your bank account, credit card, or Social Security number unless you know whom you're dealing with. Scam artists, like fake debt collectors, can use your information to commit identity theft ? charging your existing credit cards, opening new credit card, checking, or savings accounts, writing fraudulent checks, or taking out loans in your name.
?Contact your creditor. If the debt is legitimate ? but you think the collector may not be ? contact your creditor about the calls. Share the information you have about the suspicious calls and find out who, if anyone, the creditor has authorized to collect the debt.
?Report the call. Contact the FTC and your state Attorney General's office with information about suspicious callers. Many states have their own debt collection laws in addition to the federal FDCPA. Your Attorney General's office can help you determine your rights under your state's law.

http://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0258-fake-debt-collectors
Andy
Andy
2013-07-08 14:02:20
Debt Collector
i got alot of calls from this number
Everyone is saying it is EDF Debt collecting? and then they hang up!
Abby
Abby
2013-06-18 20:33:04
Telemarketer
Same guy called me from different number, had an accent, said his name was Andrew Smith and I was under criminial investigation.  Refused to name his company and continued to call my job for almost two hours.  Called the police and they said is a scam.
Anne
Anne
2013-06-18 20:11:16
Unknown
Keep calling something about home improvements. Can't answer questions as to who they are employed by, don't seem to have any clue. What a waste of time. Told them not to call here not to waste time. Think they must be paid per call regardless of response they get.
anonymous
anonymous
2013-03-01 01:09:33
Unknown
I answer phone calls from providers for an insurance company.  This company  calls us all day long
requesting DME and diabetic supply benefits.  Half the people calling to check benefits can't speak English,
and don't  have all the information needed to verify HIPAA regulations. What these providers Don't tell you is  that medicare has quantity limits as to how often you can receive supplies.  For example, you may get free diabetic supplies and monitors with your  plan. You receive your supplies in January from the supplier you always do business with. Then this company sends you supplies in February. Your insurance denies their claim because you have received your supplies for that benefit period. Since you accepted the "free" supplies from the other company  they then try to make you pay for them.
Erin
Erin
2012-12-18 15:43:38
Unknown
I have made two payments with this company now they want a third and final pAyment... I don't have it should i just tell them to leave me Alone?
Lindsay
Lindsay
2012-12-04 16:45:57
Unknown
Man name Marshall Davis acting like an undercover for a company called Providence. When you call the number after hours it says it is a business called Milers, Trailets, and Accessories. They claim to be a collection company.
SAMMY
SAMMY
2012-12-04 15:51:34
Unknown
THSI COMPANY IS NOT A SCAM IT IS LIGET IF YOU HAVE A DEBT PAY IT THEY ARE NOT TRY TO
SACM ANYONE IT IS VERY TRUTHFUL CO TO TALK TO IF YOU OWE MONEY ON INTERNET  LOANS
PL
PL
2012-12-01 00:52:30
Unknown
THIS NUMBER IS A SCAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THEY WILL SCARE YOU AND HARASS YOU STATING ALL OF YOUR INFO AND THE N TELLING YOU THAT YOU WILL BE ARRESTED IF YOU DON'T PAY!! BE WARE AND BE SMART!
annie
annie
2012-11-30 21:40:32
Unknown
getting threaten calls. does not identify who they are.
Regina R
Regina R
2012-11-30 14:08:02
Unknown
They have called family members, my work, etc.  Saying I have "2 complaints", not charges, but still.....
Regina R
Regina R
2012-11-30 14:03:46
Unknown
This phone number called me and left message, my family members, my work...saying they had "2 complaints" against me and I needed to call immediately.
Badge714
Badge714
2012-11-29 16:27:28
Unknown
As with any call of this type, "Send it in the mail at the address you have on file". Any REAL debt collector knows where you live. You don't have to tell them. Remember phone calls & emails are NOT legal proof you owe money. Letter you receive MUST show who sent it, who you owe, why you owe it & when you have owed it since. They won't send it? Tell them to shove off!
Regina R
Regina R
2012-11-29 15:47:22
Unknown
Some lady named Carolyn Jones called asking for me saying that I had 2 charges against me and I needed to call immediately to get this resolved.
Linda Cruver
Linda Cruver
2012-08-23 15:04:05
Telemarketer
I received a call from 849-963-3299. They said that they represented some senior asst. group. Then connected me to Andrew fro United Health Care Supplies in New Jersey. Wanted to send me a seat booster, back braces for upper and lower back. I told them I didn't want to give my medicare number without further info on the company and they gave me a website to check them out. The address is -ushealthcaresuppliesnj.com-. They said medicare would pay for everything and items would be sent directly to my home. I asked how much they charged medicare for these items and the man from the senior asst. group said he didn't know. I told them I wanted to check out their company and he could call me back at 4:30 PM today, 8-23-12. I didn't know this is against the law until I saw this website, this is the first one I checked.
Loki
Loki
2012-06-21 20:11:09
Telemarketer
These "US HealthCare Supply of Milford, NJ" (real company hiring robocall telemarketers, http://www.ushsnj.com/ ) is Medicare fraud on top of any illegal cell calls (fcc.gov issue) or DoNotCall violations (FTC.gov issues).  Medicare fraud complaints against the underlying scammer may be lodged by uploading an information doc or pdf file of complaint info, or voice calling, the Office of Inspector General at HHS.gov:  

http://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/report-fraud/index.asp

1-800-HHS-TIPS (1-800-447-8477)  

I was robocalled by this three tier scheme this morning, and then first handed off to someone identifying as John at "American Seniors Assistance", dodging around claiming to be in or working with an agency in Fairfax, VA (from which I'm about 150 miles away).  John asked about diabetes and back pain, and when I said yes to both, quizzed me for a date of birth to refer me to the local supplier.  Cooperating with his script, but acting confused, it turned out he was working from a list with both my parent's names and my address and DoNotCall registered land line, but did not identify a fake date of birth pretending to be my father as fake.  I was caring for my parents from 2002 to 2004, while my father died in 2006 (as to quality of the telemarketer information).  

John described "American Seniors Assistance" as a nonprofit organization, which normally is an exception to DoNotCall, but not if it's a fraud, and being used to market Medicare funded DME (Durable Medical Equipment) for which most outbound telemarketing is banned by Medicare law (including for contractors acting on behalf of approved suppliers).  

In pretensing my dead father (it seemed John expected to reach my institutionalized mother with severe dementia), I qualified for John's questions and was forwarded to a girl whose name was mumbled rapidly at "H Pas", to find the "agency allocated provider in area".  She never spelled out that acronym, which is similar to those of several real healthcare administrator and regulation titles, as others reporting these calls were told "Health Product Assistance for Seniors".  The H-PAS girl largely repeated the same questions John used, and offered the "no pain talking meter" and "supplies delivered at no cost", but dodged around what kind of "back pain solution" that "could be worn under or over cloths" would be supplied without a doctor's visit.  The talking meter and back brace descriptions are consistent with products featured on US Healthcare Supply's Web site.  

This promotion would also appear to be Postal Fraud open to Postal Inspector investigations, as these supplies were promised for delivery by US Mail.  

After the H-PAS girl's review of my confused mostly just "yes" answers (in the guise of my dead father), she offered to connect me to the same suppllier others were told, a 2 year old business run by a Jon Letko according to corporate record checks, US Healthcare Supply of Milford NJ.  She gave me the phone 855-350-2509 for them when I asked if there was one "just in case we get disconnected".  She then forwarded me to them, and a Victor Gonzales, who sounded like an actual American employee for the first time, and not some overseas boilerroom worker.  Their info from corporate and directory lookups:  

http://www.ushsnj.com/

US HealthCare Supply
(877) 521-1555
US Healthcare Supply LLC
(908) 505-1800
60 Bridge St, Milford, NJ 08848  (also 14 Bridge St., P.O. Box 372)
Jon Letko, Pres.& Manager   founded 2009, registered also in Florida 2011  

The H-PAS girl told Victor the name, address, and phone the original caller had in his files for my father, and the fake date of birth and diabetes plus back pain conditions I gave him, before dropping off the call she forwarded to him.  Victor then started verifying info, but claimed I called them and said they don't call out and that he cannot do business with anyone outwardly called, as if he's either a trained liar or is trained in Medicare marketing law and didn't know his boss is using a criminal scam.  Victor denied that his company pays telemarketers to make outbound calls as I received.  I asked for his supervisor, to whom he declined to connect me, but did agree to email the boss about my being illegally telemarketed.  

Ultimately, the criminal fraud contractors using a variety of fake CID numbers probably via VOIP aren't likely within FTC or FCC jurisdiction.  If anyone receives any supplies as a result of a parent falling for this scam, that invites a Postal Fraud complaint.  Primarily though, if Jon Letko personally in any present or future company, and the current one US Healthcare Supply LLC of NJ and registered in FL and maybe other states, are banned from doing business with Medicare, their scam is shut down.  

HHS OIG Medicare marketing fraud complaints may be phoned in at the number above, or prepared as a simple text file of tipster identified or anonymous information, and then uploaded after some pull down menu routing and category selections using the "REPORT FRAUD NOW" button at the OIG.HHS.gov link above.  Specific dates, times, numbers called, and addresses or names they appear to already have are useful, though anonymous complaints are also accepted by both phone and that Web link (and could contribute to the case being made higher priority).
Another on their list
Another on their list
2012-02-16 00:28:18
Unknown
My Dad received the same call and asked me to look into it. Can't reach anybody, just on hold with weird music.
Another on the list
Another on the list
2012-02-06 18:21:12
Unknown
My mother got a phone call from US Home Care, 855 350 2509.  She was confused also, they ordered her a back brace that was not ordred from a doctor.  I called them they denied the call but I let them know I would be reporting them to CMS.  These calls are fraud.
Another on their list
Another on their list
2012-01-13 20:45:36
Telemarketer
My Mom got a call from these folks.  The phone number you mentioned is the one they gave her to call "if she has any questions".   She was worried about it and called me.  So I called the number, and after about 5 min. on hold, I got someone.   I asked them what was the name of their company and they said they were "US Health Care".   Checked around on BBB.org, there is one US Health Care that falls under the Aetna insurance company, but there were others that came up on the list as well that may be using the same name, so I'm still not sure who this is.   I contacted Directory Assistance and they had no entry for the number.
Lois Ray
Lois Ray
2012-01-13 20:01:30
Unknown
They said, they were calling people on medicare to give them free back braces,but when I tried to call them back there wasn't any answer.
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