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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Robocalls keep on ringing

Eleanor Blum lets her phone go unanswered Friday at her home in Los Angeles. (Associated Press)
Anne Flaherty Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Jeri Vargas put her elderly mother on the “Do Not Call” list years ago. So why is the 88-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s disease still getting several recorded phone calls a day pitching her everything from vacation cruises to medical alert devices and fire extinguishers?

The Federal Communications Commission has been asked to consider whether phone companies could do more to stop the onslaught of “robocalls,” the automated phone calls favored by scammers. Since the convergence of Internet and phone lines, it’s become easy to blast out hundreds of thousands of calls in a matter of minutes to see who takes the bait. The question of whether these calls can be blocked has never been more pressing than around tax season, when many pretend to be from the IRS.

The phone companies say they worry that automatic call blocking might run afoul of laws requiring them to connect phone calls and have asked the FCC to clarify that it doesn’t. Many carriers offer call blocking services to consumers, sometimes for a fee. But they also don’t want regulators to create any hard-and-fast rules, which they say could be difficult to implement.

Consumer groups counter that the phone companies are dragging their feet for no good reason and that, once given the green light from the FCC, could block most robocalls if they wanted.

“It is time for AT&T to provide free, effective solutions to this problem immediately, so that unwanted robocalls are stopped before they reach us,” wrote Tim Marvin with Consumers Union in a letter to AT&T. The group, which has organized an online petition at EndRobocalls.com, sent similar letters to Verizon and Century Link.

AT&T said it’s not as easy as it sounds. Robocallers can easily “spoof” their identity by pretending to be from a legitimate source or by altering the caller ID. So blocking robocalls is “a bit like a game of Whack-A-Mole: just as numbers are identified for blocking, the robocaller spoofs another number,” the company said in an FCC filing.

The U.S. passed the widely popular “Do Not Call” legislation in 2003. Commercial telemarketers are not allowed to call you if you’ve put your number in the registry unless they have “an established business relationship” with you. But unsolicited phone calls remain a top consumer complaint. The Federal Trade Commission, which goes after businesses for deceptive business practices, said it receives an average of 150,000 complaints a month on robocalls and has filed more than 100 lawsuits against violators of Do Not Call rules.

Still, regulators and phone companies say they remain stumped on how to fix the problem for good.

“For every company we can shut down, there are probably 10 to 100 companies that can pop up in its place,” said Patty Hsue, an FTC staff attorney who leads the agency’s technical initiatives against robocalls.

A common example is “Rachel from Cardholder Services.” The automated voice recording encourages listeners to press a number, which connects them with someone who promised to lower their interest rates in exchange for an upfront fee. The FTC was able to trace the calls back to multiple people inside the U.S. and demand refund checks, but copycat scams continue.

For Vargas, it was the aggressive telemarketing calls that tipped her off to her mother’s failing health. Yachting equipment arrived at the house one day, followed by magazines, books and light bulbs her mom didn’t need. Vargas hid her mom’s credit cards, only to find out later that a man claiming to sell fire extinguishers had her mom search through old statements to provide him a credit card number. Vargas said she thinks robocalls were an easy way of identifying her mother as a vulnerable target. Now the phone rings all day long, but Vargas is reluctant to get rid of the line in case of an emergency.

“I don’t mind if someone calls me because I can say, ‘No thank you,’ ” said Vargas. “But it’s hard for someone like my mom.”

The problem has gotten so bad the FTC began offering cash prizes for solutions. Among the winners is Nomorobo, which hangs up on robocallers. But it only works on certain phone lines, namely Voice-over-Internet Protocol.