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New myGov inbox message Scam Email: Did you receive an message claiming ACTION NEEDED: We have been unable to reach you regarding your health plan renewal

Email and Online Scams -

Have You Received a MyGov Scam Email Message?
From Medicare or Healthcare Services, claiming:
"ACTION NEEDED: We have been unable to reach you regarding your health plan renewal"

Did you receive an email from New myGov inbox message? Did they then instruct you to III or something similar? Medicare and Social Security Scam Emails

In this case the return email address is support@directionaustralia.com which ought to be your first clue that this is a scam. 

Next, the link to click goes to a crazy long BING.COM address, something like:  https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=22ddd6c3149d0f93649c38cddaeed974d3341493f815ec4fccb71941c3cf7c53JmltdHM9MTczMzc4ODgwMA&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=4&fc&ntb=1.

Even if you were born yesterday, you can figure out thatthe U.S. government does not use any email address that does not end in .gov, and their website would not be bing.com.

Medicare and other Health Insurance scams are one of the fastest growing areas of scams today. Did you receive an email from your insurance company saying you missed a payment that you are sure you made?  It may be a scam. Did you get a Email or phone call from someone claiming to be from Medicare, Healthcare.gov, Obamacare or the Affordable Care Insurance Agency?  Again, likely to be a scam. 

See the links below to compare what you received against the most common scams and learn how to recognize a scam.

Well, don't fall for it.  It is a scam, and if you call them back or follow their instructions you will lose money and possibly your identity! The people behind this are the worst kind of human scum; willing to do anything to scare, threaten, lie, cheat and steal money from anyone, including the elderly and poor. The phone is this specific message belongs to a dance studio in Texas. Do not give out your Medicare, credit or debt card numbers.

The scammers usually operate out of Nigeria, China, Russia and even some developed western countries. Attachments typically include malware to infect your computer, tablet or phone and allow the scammer to capture your passwords.


  1. Report received:

    From support@directionaustralia.com, but it could come from ANY email address, like ANY .com, gmail, yahoo, hotmail, etc

     From: myGov <support@directionaustralia.com>
    Sent: Tuesday, December 10, 2024 11:15 PM
    To: <your email address>
    Subject: New myGov inbox message

      

    You have a new message in your myGov inbox.

    Read message

    Regards, myGov team

    Do not reply to this email.

     

Information About New myGov inbox message

Warning signs of a potential scam or scammer:

Learning how to recognize an insurance scam can help you avoid becoming a victim. Insurance scams come in many forms and some are easier to detect than others.

  •  People ask you for money to enroll you in Marketplace or "Obamacare" insurance. Legitimate Healthcare.gov enrollment assisters will NOT ask for money.
  • High-pressure tactics in person, on the phone or in mail or email. Usually from people claiming to work for the government. No one should threaten you with legal action if you do not sign up for an insurance plan.
  • Requests for personal information from people who you did not contact first. This is likely to be identity theft. No one from the government will call or email you to sell you an insurance plan or ask for personal identifying information.
  • Fake, spoofed websites. Always check the web address.  It should be .gov, not .com or something else. The scammers can fake official-looking government seals and logos, so it doesn't mean anything if it looks official!
  • If the email, letter or phone call refers to you with a generic title, like "Dear member" that is often a sign of a scam.  Your real insurance provider has you name and will use it.

Tips to avoid being scammed:

  • Be careful when giving out personal information, such as credit card, bank account numbers, or Social Security numbers.
  • Always ask for identification if someone comes to your door.
  • Don't sign paperwork unless you have read and understand it.
  • Don't respond to letters or emails asking you to wire money via Western Union MoneyGrams.
  •  If you are a Medicare beneficiary, you do NOT need to buy insurance in the new Health Insurance Marketplace.
  • For guideance about health insurance see our sister website, ConsumersHealthcareGuide.org.

How to report insurance scams

  • File a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission: Complaint Form
  • See your state insurance fraud reporting agency.
  • If you suspect identity theft, or feel like you gave your personal information to someone you shouldn't have, use the Federal Trade Commission's online Complaint Assistant.You should also contact your local police department. Visit www.ftc.gov/idtheft  to learn more about identity theft.
  • Call the Health Insurance Marketplace call center at 1-800-318-2596 (TTY: 1-855-889-4325). Explain what happened and your information will be handled appropriately.

And please let us know about any suspicious calls or emails you receive.  We look for patterns so that we can alert the authorities and victims to new scams, before it is too late!

us software that could capture sensitive data, such as online banking user names and passwords. They might also then charge you to remove this software.

See these pages for guidance as applicable to your specific situation:

Protect Yourself:

The following documents and websites can help you learn more about phishing and how to protect yourself against phishing attacks.


Methods of Reporting Phishing Email to the US Government

  • In Outlook Express, you can create a new message and drag and drop the phishing email into the new message. Address the message to phishing-report@us-cert.gov  and send it.
  • In Outlook Express you can also open the email message* and select File > Properties > Details. The email headers will appear. You can copy these as you normally copy text and include it in a new message tophishing-report@us-cert.gov .
  • If you cannot forward the email message, at a minimum, please send the URL of the phishing website.

* If the suspicious mail in question includes a file attachment, it is safer to simply highlight the message and forward it. Some configurations, especially in Windows environments, may allow the execution of arbitrary code upon opening and viewing a malicious email message.

For More Information About Phishing, See:

There are several websites that focus on reports of scam Emails.

The links below go to pages on these other websites were you can read reports about the scams associated with this phone number (855-687-1444, claiming This is Microsoft. This call is to inform you that your Microsoft license key has expired):

Related Scams

There are a number of common telephone scams, such as:

and some new and as yet, uncommon scams.

 

For a comprehensive list of national and international agencies to report scams, see this page.