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Tax scam targeting Canadians with IRS threats

Fraudsters behind the latest tax cheat phone scam making the rounds seem to have their tax agencies confused.

After beginning with threats, the message ends on a somewhat confusing note

The caller claims to be with the Internal Revenue Service, which is American, instead of the Canada Revenue Agency. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

Fraudsters behind the latestphone scam making the rounds appear to believe that Canadians pay taxes to the American Internal Revenue Service.

"Notice against your namefor tax fraud, for tax evasion," the recorded message begins and continues with its threatening tone.

"So before this matter goes to complaint goes out, or before you get arrested, kindly call us back on our callback number to get more details."

After beginning with threats, the message ends on a somewhat confusing note.

"Again, this is Officer Melvin Magic calling you from the Internal Revenue Service. Thank you and have a pleasant day."

Not once in the message does the caller name who he's trying to contact. Andscammers"spoof"the call display to disguise the number they're actually calling from.

In this case, the number given tocallback number has a 703 area code, which isusedin Virginia. The message purportedly comes from a 613 number, which is the Ottawa area code.

Scam fairly common

People on the anti-fraud website 800notes.com are weighing in on this call.

Most of them note the caller claims to be with the Internal Revenue Service, which is American, instead of the Canada Revenue Agency.

"I also received this call from Officer Melvin Magic," one poster writes."I really can't see the IRS calling me as I live in Canada and have never worked in the United States. BS!"

Another poster to 800notes writes: "What an amateur idiot.I assume it's a physhing (sic) scam."

Halifax Regional Police say they're aware of this scam, which they say is fairly common.It's frequent enough that both the Internal Revenue Service and the Canada Revenue Agency have issued warnings to taxpayers.

"Aggressive and threatening phone calls by criminals impersonating IRS agents remain near the top of the annual Dirty Dozenlist of tax scams for the 2015 filing season," the American tax agency wrote in a news release in January.

The Canada Revenue Agency issued a broader warning in 2013.

"These are phishing scams that could result in identity thefts," CRA said in a news release. "Email scams may also contain embedded malware, or malicious software, that can harm your computer and put your personal information at risk."