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CECA Immigration Australia Scam

There are many immigration working for permanent residential and study visa but they hide some of the main points which are important and are compulsory to apply in Australia. CECA one of the Immigration working for many countries and gives statement differently before applying and after. So everyone should apply before reading the reviews on valued listing sites. Do not apply for CECA Australia to apply for study of work visa. You need to apply to those immigration where you can reach physically and can get the information about the files’ status.

CECA Immigration Scam

The following are some recent frauds that have been reported:

Phone scams: The victim receives a call from what looks to be a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) hotline number or a USCIS local office number, but the true phone number is concealed. The scammer claims to be from “US Immigration” and seeks personal information or payment in one variant of this “spoofing” scam. Remember that USCIS would never ask for personal information over the phone, and the Department of Homeland Security will never utilise its hotline number for outgoing calls.

False “ICE agents” knock on immigrants’ doors, hand them fake warrants, or approach them on the street, threatening to deport them if they do not pay hundreds or thousands of dollars. Actual ICE officials will not let you dodge arrest for the sake of money.

The victim receives an email claiming to be from the US State Department, claiming that he or she has won the diversity visa lottery. In order to “complete the visa application,” the victim is frequently asked to submit money via Western Union, which the actual State Department would never do.

Scam websites: The victim is enticed to complete immigration documents and pay USCIS fees through a website that has a logo and a web address that looks and feels like an authentic US government website. Immigrants who visit these “copycat” websites assume they are paying a government filing fee to USCIS, while in fact the money is going to the crooks who run the site. Scam websites may also pretend to submit immigration documents directly to USCIS, leading victims to assume that their paperwork is being handled by the government when it was never submitted.

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