Later on, we checked the number and couldn't find any reference to it online. And what's even weirder was that when we tried to search for the same query again, it gave a completely different number (still not affiliated with GEICO).
Anyone has similar experience?
> Rivlin told me that the bogus customer service number and the impostor representative were believable.
My wife said it was the persistent CC# inquiry combined with the heavy Indian accent that put her on alert.
the assumption the e-mail is from a certain sender, just because they say so, has to be deleted from the workstream.
anytime there is a need or urgency insinuated, be critical.
cut out the middleman contact using info from what you know is a real source, such as your agents card, or policy documents. never use info from the e-mail
dont ever believe e-mail, dont ever click on anything even if you think its real, go to the actual page through your browser, or call your agent directly
You gotta verify such things independently.