Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill is warning the public about a nationwide phishing scam.
Scammers who are claiming to be from GeauxPass, Louisiana’s statewide toll system, are texting individuals saying they have an “Outstanding toll from your recent travel. If not paid soon, an additional charge will be applied to your account,” with a link underneath it.
“I received this text as well. It is a scam. If you ever receive a text that looks suspicious, be sure to never click on it. You don’t want your private information stolen by scammers,” said Attorney General Liz Murrill.
The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development confirmed that GeauxPass will never ask for personal information via text, and released this additional information:
Scammers will direct responses to a web address that has a hyphen in the address, such as geauxpass-la.com or one that is misspelled by one letter, such as leaving out the "x" in GeauxPass and had a .net domain instead of .com.
INCORRECT: https//geaupass.net
INCORRECT: https://geauxpass-la.com
The correct website to access your GeauxPass account and contact the customer service team is www.geauxpass.com
Here are tips from Attorney General Murrill to avoid the scam:
- If it looks suspicious, don’t click it.
- Government agencies do not ask for your personal information by phone, e-mail, or text. Do not give it.
- No legit government agency will call you about an outstanding warrant and ask for money.
- No government agency will ever ask for you to withdraw cash from the bank and deposit into a crypto ATM.
- Louisiana does not collect tolls by text.
If residents ever want to submit a consumer dispute, reach out to our Consumer Protection Division: https://aglizmurrill.com/ConsumerDispute.
Original source can be found here.