In the latest wave of scams happening in Jacksonville, JEA is warning customers of a phone scam involving utility bill payments.
JEA said that some JEA customers have called, had a text message sent to them or someone has visited them in-person requesting immediate payment for a utility bill and threatening to cut off power if payment isn't immediate.
The individual reportedly asks for the customer's credit card number during these interactions.
St. Johns County homeowner told she has to take down Blue Lives Matter flag
JEA said that it is not making these calls. Customers who might lose their power are officially notified by their JEA bill or by a phone message left by a JEA representative. JEA said it never requests a credit card number from customers over the phone.
Payments are either made on jea.com or JEA's phone system.
Currently, no one has fallen for the scam but it is only a matter of time, JEA said.
Knowing the current status of billing accounts is the best way to avoid this scam.
.@NewsfromJEA says they are again seeing an uptick in SCAMS. Scammers call saying you need to pay a fee or your power will be disconnected.
— Russell Colburn (@RussellANjax) March 22, 2017
.@NewsfromJEA says no one has fallen for the SCAM this time around, but fear it's only a matter of time. Remember: JEA won't call & demand $
— Russell Colburn (@RussellANjax) March 22, 2017
.@NewsfromJEA just sent @ActionNewsJax this email regarding the latest SCAM. "...best defense is to know the current status of your account" pic.twitter.com/BMLmxIhj1x
— Russell Colburn (@RussellANjax) March 22, 2017
Cox Media Group





