Scam Message Checker
Red flag

Fake legal document

An official-looking notice, warrant, or court 'document' attached to pressure you.

Why it matters

A formal-looking document lends false authority and fear, pushing payment or ID sharing.

Example only - do not act on it

Example only: Attached court notice - settle the penalty immediately.

Why scammers use this

Letterheads and case numbers are easy to fake and hard to question under pressure.

What to do

  • Pause - real authorities don't demand instant payment or threaten arrest by message.
  • Hang up or stop replying, then verify via the agency's official channel.
  • Tell someone you trust before doing anything.

What not to do

  • Don't pay a 'fine' or 'clearance fee' to avoid arrest.
  • Don't stay on a threatening call.
  • Don't share ID, KYC, or bank details under pressure.

How to verify safely

Verify through the agency's official site or a number you look up yourself - never one from the message - and remember authorities don't collect fines this way.

Scams where this appears

Related message checks

Not sure about a message?

Paste it into the checker for a private, plain-English risk check. Your message stays in your browser.

Check a message

Frequently asked questions

The document looks official - is it real?

Verify directly with the agency through official contacts. Attached 'legal documents' demanding payment are commonly fake.

Get scam safety updates

Practical scam alerts, new examples, and simple safety tips. No spam. No sensitive message data.

We only collect your email address, optional name, consent status, signup page, and signup time. See our privacy policy.