The phone number 970-931-4758 is located in or around Grand Junction, CO. This landline number is registered with Nucla-Naturita Telephone Company. There have been 27 searches conducted for this number overall. There are 9 user comments, the latest received on September 24th, 2014 and it has been marked as spam 9 times. This number has a current spam score of 90%. Below you will find additional detailed information:
Threat Detection
Potential SPAM / Scam Caller — Please use caution!
User Score
Spam Score
90% Spam Risk
Why This Number is Risky
This number has been reported as spam 9 times, has been searched 27 times, and has garnered 9 comments by our users. These numbers are higher than average, indicating a possible high risk of spam.
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(970) 931-4758
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Latest User Comments
Leave a CommentGot a call from this number and no one was on the other end. I supposed I've just confirmed my number with them. Will block now. Really sick.
Spammers for credit cards
I got a call from 970-931-4758. They only rang twice, then disconnected. If I can get their contact information, I send them a FINAL notice that they do not have permission to conduct their business on my infrastructure. I also say that if they ever contact me a***n, I do invoice them for 87.50 for "telemarketing support", their cost of continuing to conduct business on my infrastructure. My infrastructure is: phone line, electricity, physical facility, insurance, staffing, equipment etc. Then, I sit back and wait. Some call *****ing, some are so disorganized they send a check for 87.50. I continue to invoice as any other business charge - then if they do not pay - I attempt small claims court. Sometimes I have collected amazing sums.
credit card s***bag
They called my business/landline number first. I pressed the option to speak to a real person. When the person came on asking if i wanted to lower my cc interest rate, i simply asked her if she was interested in a cruise. She said "excuse me". I said sure, but you called me, a travel agent. So where do you want to go on your cruise vacation? She got **** and ****y with me. I reminded her that She called me. I told her that according to the recording that this is my "final notice" from "card member services". If this is the case, then please take me off your calling list and make it my "final call" from them. 6 minutes later the same dang number called my cell phone. Really? What does it take to get this/these telemarketers to actually make it the "final" notice? What does it really take to be on that "no call list" that the government has? Is it really just as worthless and a waste of my time? I have a business to run and i do get calls from all over the USA. so I really should answer all calls coming in. But it's to the point where i sometimes let it go to voice mail, and if by chance it is a "real" customer, I'll call them back and apologize. There is an app for cell phones. It's called "privacy star". The local news station talked about it one night, and I immediately downloaded it. It's free and it works great.
Spamsters have a new number to play with.
THE BAD NEWS: Card Services calls aren't going to stop anytime soon. THE GOOD NEWS: You can retaliate, reduce the misery, and even have some fun. RETALIATE: Waste these turkeys' time. Keep them on the line by acting like an interested prospect. Give them bogus data, including a combination of two different credit card numbers, scrambled Social Security digits, and a modified ZIP Code. Important: provide a credit card company's real 800 number. After they call the credit card company, you can give them the same credit card info as before with two of the numbers transposed, thus causing them to make a second verification call. Or you can respond, "Guess what ... H-O-O-N-N-K-K [from a $6 air horn] you've been PRANKED! Call back tomorrow for more bull****." Now they're the **** of your joke. REDUCE THE MISERY: Landlines. Enroll for the free service at nomorobo.com. Simultaneous ringing, a free feature many providers offer, enables nomorobo to receive, answer and, after one ring, automatically **** up on nuisance telephone numbers. Cell phones. Block the number, an option that becomes available on the iPhone if you click on the "i" on the right in the list of recent calls and scroll to the bottom. Unfortunately, Card Services will keep calling from new s****ed numbers, which eventually should motivate you to retaliate. HAVE FUN: Turning the tables on the perpetrators with mischievous deception and the news they've been duped provides instantaneous vigilante satisfaction. Plus you serve your fellow call recipients by slowing down this evil operation's efforts to defraud them.
Spam
I chose to talk to a live person, was asked what my total Credit Card Debt was, told them that if they were calling to reduce my credit card interest rate, they would already know the amount. They ***g up on me. Not a surprise - typical of other calls of this sort when I choose to speak to them. They want your credit card numbers.
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