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.
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Related scam-type hubs
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Check a messageFrequently 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.