Scam Detective
Phone Number

346-880-8787

Last reported Mar 25, 2026

Low Activity
  • 1 community report from users

Campaign Intelligence

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Financial and Malware Threat Cluster Consumer Protection Intelligence Report This report documents a cluster of 5,789 connected entities involved in a broad, multi-vector fraud and malware campaign targeting consumers across the United States and internationally. The cluster includes 1,271 phone numbers, 2,957 domains, 143 companies, and 281 email addresses, interconnected through 17 confirmed cross-entity relationships. The campaign appears to operate across ...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Financial Fraud and Malware Infrastructure Cluster This report documents a cluster of 4,628 connected entities identified through cross-referencing complaint databases, threat intelligence feeds, and community reporting. The cluster spans 1,295 phone numbers, 2,559 domains and IP addresses, 160 companies, and 252 email addresses. While the individual phone numbers in this cluster each carry zero FTC complaints at this time, the broader infrastructure surroundi...

Scam Campaign Intelligence Report: Multi-Vector Financial and Malware Threat Cluster This report covers a cluster of 4,263 connected entities identified through aggregated complaint data, infrastructure analysis, and community reporting. The cluster encompasses 1,055 phone numbers, 2,451 domains and IP addresses, 146 companies, and 252 email addresses, forming one of the more complex mixed-threat groupings analyzed for consumer protection purposes. The campaign appears to exploit consumer famil...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Financial Fraud and Infrastructure Cluster This report covers a cluster of 3,157 connected entities identified through shared reporting, co-appearance in consumer complaints, and cross-domain infrastructure linkages. The campaign spans 1,314 phone numbers, 1,486 domains, 170 companies, and 187 email addresses, with 16 documented cross-entity relationships. The cluster appears to blend legitimate financial institution impersonation with fraudulent domains, susp...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Fraud and Malware Cluster (3,955 Connected Entities) This report documents a large and technically sophisticated scam campaign comprising 3,955 connected entities, including 651 phone numbers, 2,107 flagged domains and IP addresses, and 182 associated email addresses. The campaign spans multiple fraud categories, combining impersonation-based telephone scams, malware distribution infrastructure, phishing email operations, and consumer fraud documented across c...

Scam Campaign Analysis Report: Multi-Vector Fraud and Malware Cluster (3,969 Connected Entities) Investigators have identified a sprawling cluster of 3,969 connected entities operating across phone, email, and web-based infrastructure, comprising 651 phone numbers, 2,121 domains and IP addresses, and 182 email addresses. The campaign spans multiple fraud categories including impersonation calls, malware distribution, botnet operations, and overpayment scams. The most prominently documented phon...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Fraud Network Involving Impersonation Calls, Malware Infrastructure, and Online Vehicle Purchase Fraud This report covers a cluster of 3,426 connected entities, including 619 phone numbers, 1,630 domains, and 181 email addresses, tied to a broad and technically sophisticated fraud campaign. The campaign combines government and business impersonation robocalls, malware distribution infrastructure, and consumer-facing vehicle purchase scams. The scale and divers...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Fraud and Malware Network (Cluster of 3,989 Connected Entities) This report documents a large-scale fraud and malware campaign identified through a cluster of 3,989 connected entities, including 651 phone numbers, 2,141 domains and IP addresses, and 182 email addresses. The campaign operates across multiple attack surfaces simultaneously, combining impersonation phone calls, malware-laced infrastructure, and deceptive email outreach to target consumers across ...

Details

First Seen
2/22/2026
Last Reported
3/25/2026
Area Code
346

Linked Company Activity

EQUIFAX, INC.
1 BBB complaint · Credit Cards] [Business: Equifax Impersonator] [Location: MD, USA- 21207]
TRANSUNION INTERMEDIATE HOLDINGS, INC.
4 BBB complaints · Phishing] [Business: TransUnion Imposter Sc
JPMORGAN CHASE & CO.
16 BBB complaints
CITIBANK, N.A.
30 BBB complaints
SELECT PORTFOLIO SERVICING, INC.
1 BBB complaint · Advance Fee Loan] [Business: Said they were from Select Portfolio Servicing] [Location:
WELLS FARGO & COMPANY
226 BBB complaints

Connected Entities

Community Reports

Classy Cycles - AKA California Cycles (Panama City Beach Fl) - Crooks and Scam Artists - DO NOT RENT FROM THEM!! This is a family owned business in Panama City Beach Florida - they rent scooters, golf carts and motorcycles. The owner is some 70 year old wanna be Billy Ray Cirus asshat named Mike. He is nothing more than a low life scum con artist. They rip off tourists that are just trying to have fun on vacation. They will come up with any reason to keep your $100 security deposit. I wish I would have read the reviews on this company before I gave them my $$: http://www.merchantcircle.com/business/Classy.Cycle.Inc.850-234-7642#feedback-reviews We paid $125 dollars to rent a golf cart from 8pm - 10am. We rode the golf cart, which was a huge piece of shit, for about 2 hours. It had horrible brakes the steering sucked and it went slow as hell. But my two little girls loved it - and it was fun for a few to ride around to the shops. Then after riding it for about 2 hours - I dropped my wife two kids and parents off at the condo and drove the golf cart back down to the Classy Cycles shop - my car was still there anyway. I parked it right next to another golf cart that was charging - and went back to my condo. I kept the key - because the golf cart was just sitting outside, and was going to take it back the next morning after they opened. They kept our security deposit because the battery in the golf cart was not fully charged - even though I went out of our way to take the golf cart back to their location at 11:15pm at night and plug it in - where they said we could. We went back the next morning after eating breakfast at 9:45am to turn in the key and after sitting from 11:15pm - 9:45am the battery was not fully charged - and they kept our $100 deposit because of this. The battery was 2 notches low of being fully charged. The kid that was at the counter when I turned the key in - immediately went out to the golf cart - turned the key and said "batter is no

4745 days ago1 upvote

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