Fake Toll Texts Rattle Seattle Drivers, Spark Flurry Of 911 Calls

State troopers and traffic officials put Seattle-area drivers on alert Friday, warning about a wave of scam text messages pretending to be from the Washington State Department of Transportation’s tolling program. The texts claim recipients owe “outstanding” tolls and tell them to click a link or risk arrest. Officials say several people were alarmed enough to call 911, pulling the scam straight into the emergency dispatch system.

State patrol flags messages as a scam

The Washington State Patrol’s public information office told traffic partners it had received “several 911 calls” from people who got the texts. The messages falsely claimed to be from WSDOT, warned of unpaid toll fees and even threatened possible arrest. That warning was then shared by WSDOT Traffic on X, which retweeted the patrol’s notice to its followers.

How the smishing scheme works

Scammers are using “smishing,” or phishing by SMS, to impersonate toll agencies. They send urgent-sounding texts that link to fake payment pages designed to grab money or personal information. Federal consumer authorities, including the Federal Trade Commission, say the tactic has spread nationwide and often leans on small-dollar amounts and intimidating language to push people into quick decisions. National reporting has urged drivers not to tap unexpected payment links and to verify any notice through an agency’s official website instead of the message itself. The Washington Post

How to protect yourself

WSDOT’s Good To Go! program says it does not send unsolicited texts that ask for payment. Legitimate toll notices show up in your MyGoodToGo account or arrive by mail. If a sketchy text pops up, do not click the link, block the sender, and forward the message to 7726 (SPAM). WSDOT’s advisory also urges drivers to report fraud through the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center and to contact their bank right away if they have already paid. WSDOT’s advisory

If you clicked a link

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