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SSA Watchdog Warns of Scam Using Fake Supreme Court Letters to Target Beneficiaries

The letters fabricate asset‑freeze orders to pressure recipients into giving up sensitive information.

Overview

  • The active scheme uses counterfeit Supreme Court letterhead with forged signatures of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Sonia Sotomayor.
  • Letters are personally addressed and assert the recipient is a suspect, citing real officials such as an SSA executive and New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez while even misnaming the DEA.
  • Claims include a compromised Social Security number, supposed cooperation with the Treasury, and limits like $10,000 per bank account and $80,000–$100,000 in investments.
  • The SSA Office of Inspector General calls the notices completely false, urging people to tear them up, with follow‑ups by text or phone often used to escalate pressure.
  • Authorities direct the public to report at ssa.gov/scam or to the FTC, and experts recommend immediate steps for anyone who engaged, including freezing accounts and monitoring credit.