By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Beware the telephone YES scam
Placeholder Image

The number one onsumer complaint to DATCP in 2016 was telemarketing. Telemarketing complaints spiked in 2016, up 45% from the previous year  – with 3,685 total complaints.  

While 2017 may still be young, telemarketing inquiries are already off to a busy start due to a recent rash of potential scam phone calls known as “yes” scams.

Consumers are reporting to DATCP that they have received calls out of the blue where a friendly voice asks, “Can you hear me?” (or a similar question). The call recipient’s first instinct could get the best of them, as their “yes” response may be recorded and used against them.

Con artists may be using these recordings of people saying “yes” to bill them for products or services they never actually agreed to. 

DATCP’s Consumer Protection Hotline has heard from consumers in every corner of the state who are worried that they may have received one of these calls, and more than 75% of those who contacted DATCP have said “yes” during a suspicious call.

“We are asking potential victims to watch for suspicious charges on bills and credit card statements and to report back to us if they run into problems,” said Frank Frassetto, Division Administrator for Trade and Consumer Protection. “We are still trying to confirm how scammers may be using recorded ‘yes’ responses in these recent calls, so please share your experience with our agency through our hotline so that we can warn others.”

The best protection for consumers is to watch out for any unsolicited call that starts with a question, such as “Hi, is this ___?” or “Can you hear me?” Take a couple of seconds to decide whether to hang up or to reply with something along the lines of “Who is calling?” Remember that the caller may not necessarily open with the question, so stay on guard.

Looking back at the telemarketing complaints received in 2016, there were two major drivers in this category: “unknown” calls and imposter scams. Consumers reported thousands of phone numbers to DATCP as the supposed source of unwanted phone calls – unknown numbers were those that led nowhere when a return call was placed or that led to a nondescript message that provided no additional details about the caller. Because scammers can use technology to “spoof” their calls (make the caller ID read however they choose), it is possible that the actual call did not, in fact, originate from that line.

Imposter scams flooded phone lines across Wisconsin and the nation in 2016, with crooks seeking money or personal information from potential victims by falsely claiming to represent government agencies like the IRS or United States Treasury, credit card providers or computer tech support companies.

The best tips for consumers to avoid telemarketing rip offs are:

Sign up for the Do Not Call registry to limit the number of unsolicited calls you receive from legitimate telemarketers. Law-abiding telemarketers will not purposely call a number on the Do Not Call registry, so if your number is on the list and you receive a sales call, it is likely not a company you would want to hire. Remember that criminals making fraudulent phone calls have no regard for any state or federal No Call laws.

Don’t trust your caller ID. Scammers can spoof this information, so never take the data on the readout as absolute if you receive a questionable call. 

Never press a button during a questionable unsolicited phone call, even if you are supposedly given an option to “be removed from the call list.” Pressing a button may register your number as active in a caller’s computer system, leading to additional calls.

Never give out your personal or financial information in a phone call unless you initiated the contact. Legitimate companies don’t call seeking those details.

Don’t wire money to someone you don’t know. Funds sent via wire transfer or money card are practically impossible to track. When they are sent, they are as good as gone.

To learn more about telemarketing including your consumer rights, review our DATCP fact sheet: https://datcp.wi.gov/Pages/Publications/Telemarketing976.aspx. 

p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; text-align: justify; text-indent: 9.0px; line-height: 11.0px; font: 10.0px Times} span.s1 {text-decoration: underline ; color: #4787ff}

If you receive questionable phone calls and are wondering about their legitimacy, contact DATCP’s Consumer Protection Hotline at 1-800-422-7128 or via e-mail: datcphotline@wisconsin.gov.

Two UW–Platteville students die in dorm shooting
Both graduated Saturday
UWP shooting
Police investigate the shooting deaths of two UW–Platteville students in Wilgus Hall Monday. - photo by By Steve Prestegard

Two UW–Platteville students died in a shooting in UWP’s Wilgus Hall Monday afternoon.

Kelsie Martin, 22, Beloit, died at UW Hospital in Madison, where she was taken by Med Flight helicopter from Southwest Health in Platteville after the shooting.

A UW–Platteville email Tuesday afternoon said preliminary autopsy results determined Martin died from a gunshot wound.

Hallie Helms, 22, Baraboo, was found dead of a gunshot wound at the shooting scene, according to the email.

Martin’s and Helms’ deaths were announced Monday night more than seven hours after a report of a multiple-casualty incident that brought police, fire and EMS on campus and resulted in lockdowns on the UWP campus and in Platteville schools.

UW–Platteville police responded to a 911 call for a disturbance at Wilgus Hall Monday before 4 p.m.

Police found Martin, who was transported by Southwest Health EMS to Southwest Health before she was Med Flighted to UW Hospital, and Helms’ body.

The state Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation is investigating “the circumstances surrounding the death of the two individuals,” the email said.

Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call UW–Platteville police, 608-342-1584.

 “Our biggest concern at this point first and foremost is the safety and wellbeing of our students,” said chancellor Tammy Evetovich during a news conference in the Markee Pioneer Student Center Monday evening attended by a room full of UWP students. “What we have to focus on are those students that are impacted and support them in ways that only the people on this campus can do.

“One of the strengths of UW–Platteville is we are small enough to support you personally, so that I ask you all to take advantage of that.”

Dean of students Amber Monroe said counseling services would be available through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Students who were “directly impacted” were individually contacted for how they can access counseling, she added.

The UWP email identifying Martin and Helms said a free, confidential UW Mental Health 24/7 line is available at 1-888-531-2142.

Martin graduated summa cum laude from UWP Saturday with a bachelor’s degree in psychology with an emphasis in human services. She was assistant resident director of Wilgus Hall.

Martin said in a UW–Platteville Residence Life Facebook post that she “wanted to help people the same way my RA helped me through my first year on campus.”

Helms graduated magna cum laude from UWP Saturday with a bachelor’s degree in Elementary Education, according to UWP’s spring commencement program. She was a resident of Wilgus Hall.

Southwest Health EMS was sent to a report of a possible multiple-casualty incident Monday around 3:50 p.m. A few minutes later Platteville Fire was dispatched to set up a perimeter around Wilgus Hall.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel quoted a UW–Platteville criminal justice student who graduated Saturday as hearing an argument on the first floor of Wilgus Hall around 3:20 p.m. The student then heard a single loud bang and what sounded like something falling on a floor, the Journal Sentinel said.

A text message was sent to students Monday at 4:06 p.m. reporting “an emergency situation” on campus and advising to “avoid campus and shelter in place.”

One minute later another UWP text said to “avoid the Wilgus Hall area.”

Two UWP students who live in Wilgus Hall one floor below the incident said they heard nothing when the incident took place.

UWP student Joseph Lambie said he was in Wilgus Hall when the incident took place. He was told to leave the dorm, and when he tried to leave by the east stairway he was told to leave by another exit.

By 4:15 p.m. after firefighters left the scene, Platteville and UW–Platteville police and Grant and Jo Daviess county sheriff’s deputies were investigating and cordoning off the area. A Southwest Health ambulance left with a patient.

A text at 5:03 p.m. said that “law enforcement has confirmed that there is no active threat to the campus community.”

A UWP email at 5:11 p.m. ended the shelter-in-place advisory.

Students who live on the four floors of Wilgus Hall were moved to Brockert Hall Monday night. Following commencement Saturday students who are not staying at UWP this summer are moving out this week.

UW–Platteville first canceled exams scheduled for late Monday and Tuesday, then decided later to cancel all exams that haven’t taken place at its main and Baraboo–Sauk County campuses.

Provost and vice chancellor Laura Reynolds said finals were canceled because “we are a close-knit community. Both the faculty and staff as well as the students need time to be together, need time to work through this together. We are deeply saddened and know this event has negative impact on our Pioneers, and we know students will want to be able to focus on their own well-being and spend time with friends and their families.”

Reynolds said deans of UWP’s colleges will make arrangements with end-of-the-year assignments and senior projects on a case-by-case basis, including with classes where exams took place before the incident. UWP’s Textbook Center also will be open extended hours this week.

“There are so many varied situations on this campus that it’s impossible to address it as a whole,” she said. “That will be something that the offices of the deans will work out, to make sure that we provide as much equity and as much parity as we can across these experiences. … No solution here is perfect, but we want to opt for what prioritizes you as students.”

An email to UWP faculty said that “traditional final exams are not permitted” faculty may meet optionally with students “to determine the most appropriate path forward.” The email instructed faculty to “ensure that students experience no harm to thir final grade as a result of the disruption.”

Evetovich said “scenario-planning is something we do regularly,” including Monday morning in a different kind of scenario. “We certainly can’t plan for everything, but we do train on it regularly, and I think it did help us in this instance.”

The incident had impacts beyond the UWP dorms.

The Six Rivers Conference track meet was being held at the UW–Platteville Track and Field Complex when the incident began. Participants were sheltered in place in Williams Fieldhouse until the campus shelter-in-place notice was lifted, after which the track meet was canceled.

The Six Rivers meet will be held at River Ridge High School in Patch Grove Thursday at 3:45 p.m.

“Out of an abundance of caution we secured our buildings” and canceled practices Monday afternoon, said Platteville School District superintendent Jim Boebel.

The school district is making counseling available for students this week.

The Platteville High School band and orchestra concert in the PHS auditorium originally scheduled for Monday night was postponed until today at 7 p.m.

Rolling Hills Church and First English Lutheran Church in Platteville jointly held a service Monday night. Community Evangelical Free Church in Platteville also held a service Monday night.

UW–Platteville police chief Joe Hallman said Monday that weapons are not allowed in residence halls. Weapons owned by students involved in such activities as trap shooting are stored at the UWP Police Department. He said police do not recommend students keeping weapons in their vehicles on campus.

Platteville, Cuba City, East Dubuque, Lancaster and Baraboo police, Grant County Emegency Management and the Wisconsin State Crime Lab assisted UW–Platteville police.

UW–Platteville has had two fatal on-campus shooting incidents. UWP student Kathleen Moan, 20, was shot to death in the snack bar of what was the Student Center and now is Ullsvik Hall by another UWP student Dec. 8, 1964. A woman shot herself to death on campus March 20, 1995.