Phishing alert: Fake text messages

Please DO NOT provide a password to ANYONE! The best response is NO response.

Several Trinity members have received text messages from someone pretending to be a member of the congregation and asking for a password. This is a fraudulent request. Please do not respond at all. If you reply, then they know a REAL person is on the other end and they can come after YOU!

If someone contacts you via text or email asking for something like gift cards, money, or passwords, and you are concerned the call is fraudulent: try contacting that person via another method like a phone call to confirm they have a real need (or to discover the text or email was from a fraudster!).

Scam Alert: Texts and Emails

Please don’t respond to any text or emails from any staff or prior staff asking for help.

Several Trinity members have received text messages from someone pretending to be Rev Beebe within the last few days. The phone number used was: 1-947-253-6206 — but the number used to contact you could be different! The fraudsters do not know (yet) that Rev Beebe is no longer Trinity’s head pastor.

Your best response is NO response. In each case, the person asking for assistance was not Rev Beebe — it was a fraudster.

If someone contacts you via text or email asking for something like gift cards, money, or passwords, and you are concerned the call is fraudulent: try contacting that person via another method like a phone call to confirm they have a real need (or to discover the text or email was from a fraudster!).

Scam Alert: Trinity Directory password phishing

Please don’t respond to anyone asking for Trinity’s Directory password by email or text.

Trinity members needing the Directory password can contact the Trinity office directly.

There have been several cases today of FRAUDULENT text or email messages masquerading as Trinity members asking for the Trinity Directory password. Your best response is NO response. In each case, the person asking for the password was NOT the Trinity member — it was a fraudster.

If someone contacts you via text or email asking for something like gift cards, money, or passwords, try contacting that person via another method like a phone call to confirm they have a real need (or to discover the text or email was from a fraudster!).

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