Criminals buy pieces of paper with people's information on them. It might be from an old bank or car loan that was paid off and you might have been listed on there. Or they might have gotten the information from some place that was hacked. In any case, put a fraud watch on your credit reports at the three major credit bureaus. Also If you feel you SSN has been compromised, in addition to putting a fraud alert at the 3 credit bureaus, you may want to notify the IRS. Here is the link, fill out the proper form (probably 14039):
http://www.irs.gov/Individuals/How-Do-You-Rep ... aud-Activity%3F
I just got a call from 323-210-8095 at approx 5:00pm and can report the exact same things of the other comments. Very rude lady and man saying I needed to show for court I had those costs plus a 3000 dollar card somewhere. Geez, I just started saying a few choice words and told them I didn't have time for their foolishness! What gave it away was the address they supposedly sent the letter to. Haven't lived there in many years.
Same experience - phone was ringing but I couldn't answer it. Then missed call was under Unknown.
Said below on the vm message:
"This call is for (my name) I am calling from QRS. I need to set up for a delivery of legal documents. Apparently there was a refusal to sign for these on your behalf. To avoid further legal issues, you have 2 hours to call the firm that paid for our services. The number is 323-210-8095. This is in reference to complain # *** *** MD. Again you need to call 323-210-8095 NOW
I just received a call from QRS stating I refused to sign for legal paperwork. I called the # 323-210-8095 and the man who answered the telephone stated he was an "attorney" who hired QRS to serve the paperwork. I offered to provide him with my local court house sheriff department contact information and told him to have me served using them. He told me they do not do that. Any legit law firm would serve you using local county sheriff department. I informed him that he was a scam and never to contact me again. At that point he disconnected the call.
Good for you! Here is what a REAL process server has to say about these bogus servers:
An actual Process Server is not going to have any conversation with you about any debt you owe, nor will they demand payment from you. If something like this happens, immediately call local law enforcement and make a full report including as much descriptive information as you can give them of the person impersonating a court officer.
Just happened to me, and conveniently when discussing often the world banks corruption. Anyone get this call after complaining about them? "This call is for _______ (MY HUSBAND on my cell phone???), he is being sued for a debt and... "Wait a minute. Being sued for what?" "I don't know, I'm just the collector. Call this number and here is your case number" "And whom may I ask is THIS?" "Qrs (said very funkily to confuse me.. everything was actually. fyi guys.. phone calls do not equal court summons.)