Scam Detective

Scam Campaign

Credit Corp Solutions Inc. Complaint Cluster

Identified on 4/18/2026

Primary Entity

domain

www.econsumer.gov.
Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 3 community reports from users

Campaign Narrative

This scam campaign involves a sophisticated network of entities that exploit legitimate government and industry names to deceive consumers, with connections spanning across 4 domains and 5 companies generating over 2,800 total consumer complaints. The campaign centers around the misuse of the legitimate domain www.econsumer.gov, which appears connected to multiple fraudulent operations through co-reporting patterns. This domain has been reported alongside suspicious entities including silviax.com, kidsmegaworld.com, and icann.org, suggesting scammers are impersonating official government consumer protection resources to gain credibility.

The most concerning aspect of this campaign is the involvement of debt collection operations, particularly Credit Corp Solutions Inc., which has generated 2,743 CFPB complaints and shows connections to multiple domains in the network. ACCOUNT SERVICES INC. adds another 8 debt collection complaints to the cluster. These debt collection entities are linked through co-reporting relationships to the government domain impersonation scheme, indicating scammers may be using fake government websites to legitimize fraudulent debt collection attempts. Additionally, United Group Inc. with 75 vehicle loan complaints shows a perfect confidence connection to Changed Inc., suggesting coordinated financial services fraud.

Consumer impact data reveals significant harm across multiple sectors, with community reports describing failed product deliveries, unauthorized payment processing, and inability to contact companies for refunds or support. One victim reported ordering products in September 2025 through a glitchy website that provided no confirmation, while another described purchasing items that were marked as delivered but never received. A third consumer reported losing money through PayPal for products that never arrived, with the company subsequently disappearing from advertising platforms. The presence of newly registered domains like kidsmegaworld.com (registered October 28, 2024) alongside established fraudulent operations suggests this campaign is actively expanding.

To protect yourself from this campaign, always verify government websites by typing official URLs directly into your browser rather than clicking links in emails or ads - legitimate government sites like consumer.gov will have proper .gov domains without extra characters. If contacted by debt collectors or financial services companies, demand written validation of debts and verify company legitimacy through official state licensing databases before providing any personal information. Never trust websites that have technical glitches during payment processing or fail to provide immediate order confirmations. If you encounter any of these entities, do not click suspicious links, hang up on unsolicited calls, and report the contact to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or file complaints with the FCC for unwanted calls and texts.

This represents a high-threat campaign due to its impersonation of government resources and the volume of consumer complaints across multiple industries. The 2,800+ total complaints and sophisticated use of legitimate-seeming domains indicate an organized operation targeting consumers seeking debt relief or government assistance. Consumers should immediately report any contact from entities in this network and verify all government and financial services communications through official channels before taking any action.

Entity Roster

Domains (4)

Companies (5)

Data Sources

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