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Scam Alert: Office Scams

The university has recently identified potential office scams in which a caller attempts to obtain the serial number of an on-campus fax machine. We ask that you watch out for possible office scams and take the necessary steps to protect your department against them.

Don?t buy from telemarketers or give information about office equipment in your department to anyone you don?t know. If you receive a call from an unfamiliar vendor who is pressing to make a sale or inquiring about the office equipment in your department (manufacturers, model numbers, or serial numbers), write down the caller?s name and phone number and offer to return the call. Then contact the University Police at x4-2133 for assistance.

Scams involving toner cartridges and other office supplies and advertising are fairly common. The toner and office supply scammers often use nondescript names that can easily be confused with the name of legitimate vendors. Advertising scammers often claim to have publications that target minorities and special interest groups.

Examples of Office Scams:
A toner scam may begin with a phone call from someone asking questions about model or serial numbers of copiers, fax machines and printers in a department or the office supply vendors that a department uses. The caller will often have information about a department ? names and titles of employees, location of department offices, etc. ? that is readily available from university directories and other public sources. The scammers may simply send an invoice for toner or other office supplies, often marked ?past due.? There may be follow-up phone calls pressing for payment. Only rarely are any goods delivered and those that are usually have not been ordered and are over-priced and of poor quality.

An advertising scam may start with a phone call offering to publish magazine ads for the university or asking if a department wants to renew its ads from prior years. The scammers often send an invoice for an ad that they claim to have run in their publication. As with the toner scam, the invoices are often marked as being past due and there may be follow-up phone calls demanding rapid payment. Unlike many invoices for legitimate ads, the scammers? invoices contain little information about the size or dimension of the ad (such as number of words, number of lines, or size of column inches) or when the ad was supposed to have run. Occasionally, the scammer will produce a copy of the ad or even an issue of the publication if a department asks for these items but cannot provide a document showing the department actually requested the ad.

Steps you can take to protect your department against vendor scams:

Know your vendor. A safe and easy way to protect your department is to buy from state contract vendors whenever possible. If you need to go off contract, stick to vendors or publications and other media resources with a known performance record.

When in doubt, university employees should call Procurement at x4-2171 to inquire about a vendor?s legitimacy. You may also check Towson University Procurement?s Web page at {http://www.towson.edu/adminfinance/fiscalplanning/procurement/}.

Use an internet search engine to check out a vendor on-line. The Web site for the Better Business Bureau also provides a way to search for information about vendors, nationwide. The URL is {http://www.bbb.org}. Follow the link to Check out a Company.

Keep track of what you?ve ordered. Keep a copy of orders you submit via mail or the originals of orders you submit by fax.
Do not give out your procurement card information to unknown vendors. Remember that the procurement card bank does not have your email address.

Additional information/tips can be found at {http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/edcams/supplies/pubs/tpsboss.htm}.