Your ability to "collect" on any of these is based on them having a US presence. If they are overseas then there is no teeth to this law and you complaint will go into a black hold. 99% of the calls are from overseas.
That's why the FCC passed the STIR/SHAKEN requirement. The problem is they created an exception for small ISPs, so now all the criminals just go to small companies or they have someone in the country set up a small company for them. It was really stupid. The FCC could have fixed this, but they decided to put in a loophole. As someone that works in IT, I assure you it is completely technically possible to prevent calls from other countries, states, or even within your own state from being used for criminal intent. All they have to do is require that a phone number be registered to an operator and that they have a policy in place to make it easy to report them. For any phone numbers outside of the country, they can use a certificate system and any phone companies that won't comply don't get access.
Seek legal action against them. When you do this, the govt contacts the foreign govt and the foreign govt doesn't typically play like we do. They take Physical action. Literally. LOL.
I just set my iPhone to not ring for unknown callers. Settings > Phone > Silence unknown callers. It’ll only ring for your contacts and numbers you’ve called recently. They can still leave voicemail, but for whatever reason, telemarketers hardly ever do that.
Then put your number on the National Do Not Call Registry and log the calls, the send the price. $3k ez and if not then it can get investigated ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ not our job to put the people on their place if the law ruins their lives for them
FYI: Your car warranty will have you speak to 3 different people (screeners) before you get a salesman. That guy will only give you the monthly charge, never the total. I can do math in my head (yup, I'm a genius). That warranty will cost you about $5k per year. I can get a lot of repairs for $5k.
1) Enable "Do Not Disturb" on your phone. 2) Don't answer unrecognized numbers. If it's important, they'll leave a voicemail. 3) Put your phone on "vibrate", turn down your ringer volume, or simply use a less annoying ringer. 4) Move on with your day.
The very first time you sued you got a $3,000 settlement? Not believable, considering he's trying to get you to buy his program. The only thing that reduced these robocalls for me was to answer the phone and immediately hang up, not allowing them to leave a voice message. Now I only get 4-6 calls per week.
I use android, the vast majority of the scam calls seem to be filtered out. I've only received maybe 4-6 scam calls in the past 4 years I've owned an android device. It's not perfect but it does seem to be pretty efficient at filtering out unwanted noise.
I just don't answer the phone, they can leave a message if it's that important. I keep the phone in another room away from me for days sometimes and I forget about it and the battery goes dead. Win win.
@@eeyore6532 Someone calls and leaves a message, but you don't get around to checking it for days. That's if they leave a message. Again, how is that a win? One day you're going to get a call that you wish you answered.
Go on, waste your time with that stupid lawsuit to collect a whole $2.50 then owe tax on your kings ransom. All you will net is a nickel wile the lawyers will be the ones to get the lions share of any settlement.
You don't even need robo calls to drive you up the wall. I've had issues even with telemarketers from the same place call me 1 - 2 times a week in my country the one time. And would not take me off their list. Eventually blew a referee whistle into the phone. Problem solved. Never been bugged by them again.
They have this law in Canada, US, and most of the EU countries. Robot calls are illegal except for government emergency services, and political parties. These must be used for specific reasons. The problem with many of the robot calls trying to sell services, or Scam people are from out of the country originating from where the US, Canada, some others, and the EU countries have no legal way to prosecute the callers. I've received up to 10 per day which is very disturbing. I've contacted the telephone company I deal with. They put a logger service on my telephone service. They were able to tell me many of the calls I've been getting were from India, Malaysia, Russia, Turkey, and China. They told me all they can do is lodge a complaint to the carriers of the callers, but probably nothing will be done.
I’m in Canada and our telephone numbers are structured the same as American numbers so they assume it’s all the same. My funniest one so far is a scammer trying to sell me Medicare. While most of us in Canada have private health insurance, it was funny. Apparently I applied on Marketplace??
It's partially because anytime you give your number to any business especially the ones where they say they need it so you can get store points to get discounts, are able give you those discounts because they make money by selling your number and info. Robo calls could cut back if it was made illegal to do so
Before my mom was getting around 75 calls on here cell phone per day. Then she got a Google Pixel 7 smartphone and I showed her how to setup and use "call screening". She that day she no longer get's those type of calls anymore.
With SS7 signaling and VOIP service being used, the phone numbers tend to be fake or blocked since the VOIP provider had no legal duty to ensure that the calling party provides the correct information on the origin number.
Technically, the VOIP originator or gateway provider is nowadays required to sign the call using STIR/SHAKEN… it’s just that many unscrupulous operators still ignore this requirement. The FCC needs to get to a point where all VOIP calls to the PSTN have to be signed in order to be completed.
Want to make this work? It's very simple. Have the telephone company that connects them charge them. Give the telephone company 10% of every penalty they apply to the scammers and robocallers. They will make it worth their time to actually do the job telecommunications companies SHOULD be doing in the first place.
Sure but they use auto-dial spoofers which generate a fake number then disappear. I am on a the dnd registry. For awhile I was getting about 300 calls a month.
Given the relatively small amounts of these settlements, the law is not acting as a deterrent. Would be great to have Colorado’s Federal and State elected officials on record regarding what they are doing to strengthen and expand these protections and why they haven’t moved to increase the fines (at a minimum) by the rate of inflation. Oh, wait. Could it be that these companies are also campaign donors?
Comments like this are so naive. The law doesn't even deter drug dealers. So why would you think it would make a difference here? Thinking companies are making political donations is hilarious. Between that and the phone companies being in on it, I fail to see where any money is being made.
These anti-spam call laws are toothless! I just use the "settings" function on my iPhone to silently route any incoming call from a number NOT in my (quite large) contact list straight to voicemail! The VERY few times it IS a call I want, I just return the call.
Getting contacted by several parties in the past month for somebody that doesn't live in my house anymore. But I don't have caller ID turned on because my mother insists it costs too much money. One call even dialed outside of the 9 PM to 8 AM "quiet range". Also, I don't even have the heart to tell them I'm on the do-not-call thing.
Good luck collecting that money from India and proving the company behind it. Those companies are all in India/Pakistan. Now you know why no one has pursued this.
Sometimes location matters. I have two US phone numbers, one from South Carolina and one from California. My South Carolina number gets spam/scam calls all the time. The California number never gets them.
Dust off your answering machine. Screen your calls. I use a Steven Hawking voice to let them know its not going to be a person answering. They will stop calling. It wont cost you $47. Indian callers are immune so you are just wasting your time threatening them.
Merry Beth I haven’t had any calls for you lately did the state police finally tell you to stop giving out my number to legitimate local businesses and telling them to call asking for you?😂 hundreds of calls and texts last year please make it stop this is a form of harassment when someone gets your number that doesn’t like you and pays ppl to sign it up for all this stuff.
Go to websites that refer you to insurance companies. They usually want a phone number to call you for rates, then they take that number and sell it to every data broker in the country. Soon they will be calling you constantly.
This is happening to me too. I have registered with the federal do not call registration, buy they still call. I also get calls that hang up as soon as I answer. Now my ringer is off and I never answer my phone. Never. ... my voice mail message is very long and tells you to send me a text.
I get calls where they say nothing, after I answer in a different voice than my normal one. How do you find out who the caller is, when they spoof their number?
0:21 You have a news crew coming over to your house to record video of your phone ringing and you don’t have the presence of mind to clean or replace your nasty phone? I’d be embarrassed, especially after they use it as the thumbnail on RUclips. 😒
No if only we can do something like this with emails, text messages AND especially entities like auto dealerships and makers collecting our data, packaging our data and selling our data. Stop the data mining molesters!
@DavidKen878 If they don't leave a voicemail, then they're not important. That simple. Plus, i have an email address to if needed since I know to expect.
I have one of those old phones for when the power goes out, making cordless phones useless and we live in a place with very bad coverage with a cell phone. Plus they make great boat anchors.🤣
My question is does the TCPA apply in a situation not where they want to sell you something, but when they want to buy something from you? I get a lot of “we wanna buy your home phone calls” and it sure would be nice to get them to stop.
They seem to reduce as I respond with escalating prices well out of the market. Q: "Are you interested in selling your house at 123 Foobar Pl?" (Or some similar speech.) A: "$1.2M." (For a house that would sell for maybe $150K; use your own numbers. Next call answered with $1.4M, and so on.) Maybe the caller says s/he needs to speak to a manager. I say if you want to buy it, that's the price, as is, in cash, mail the contract. Good day. And hang up. I point out that I'm entirely serious; a buyer (who still would have to be qualified) willing to pay several times market, in cash, would allow us to find other suitable digs, and would compensate for some percentage of the total spam nuisance. Almost all of these calls are robodialed but have an actual person on the other end. They get tired quickly with such numbers.
@@annelarrybrunelle3570 I did the exact same thing, I told them they wouldn't like the price I want for my home and gave them a ridiculous number, they haven't called back.
Now they hijack local numbers though. Unless you can get them to divulge their business, which I assume isn't easy and would often reaquire you supplying them with your own personal info, I don't see much in the way of profiting from this. Answering the calls is literally the worst thing you can do. Besides giving them information which leads to them siphoning money from your bank account.
Robocallers ignore the Do Not Call List, because no one enforces that requirement. I've been plagued by robocalls despite being on the Do Not Call List for many years.
this story made me giggle like a schoolgirl. there is no backbone to this law...its as useless as a $2 watch. you have to be stoned on some jamacian stuff to think anything is going to happen
How to get sometimes two or three robo calls a day. If you want to help for me to get money from them then that would be great because I can really use it to help others I hope
The telecommunications industry is not interested in really ending this practice because they make tons of money on it.
Tons of money how? I swear you all think this ridiculous logic applies to everything.
@@DavidKen878 they have to pay the telecom companies to use their services, and they use their services quite a lot
Tell us you missed the point without telling us you missed the point.
Telecom company know exactly where the robocalls are coming from , and they could block them.
Because of idiot people
Your ability to "collect" on any of these is based on them having a US presence. If they are overseas then there is no teeth to this law and you complaint will go into a black hold. 99% of the calls are from overseas.
If it's a US company hiring a foreign company to do the calling, the US company is still responsible for the foreign contractors they hire.
Could use sanctions to put pressure on the source countries.
@@boslyporshy6553 Oh, sure. Assuming you can find them. Or that you can put sanctions on the country in the first place.
Ron, nobody likes your Debbie downer attitude.
99% of people citing statistics make up their numbers.
That dirty phone is the real crime.
Must be a hoarder lady and they just carefully framed around all the junk she had piled up. Nasty 🤮
This is useless for foreign callers. I have been called repeatedly by Indian firms selling viagra, et al. I use Robokiller
That's why the FCC passed the STIR/SHAKEN requirement. The problem is they created an exception for small ISPs, so now all the criminals just go to small companies or they have someone in the country set up a small company for them. It was really stupid. The FCC could have fixed this, but they decided to put in a loophole.
As someone that works in IT, I assure you it is completely technically possible to prevent calls from other countries, states, or even within your own state from being used for criminal intent. All they have to do is require that a phone number be registered to an operator and that they have a policy in place to make it easy to report them. For any phone numbers outside of the country, they can use a certificate system and any phone companies that won't comply don't get access.
Seek legal action against them. When you do this, the govt contacts the foreign govt and the foreign govt doesn't typically play like we do. They take Physical action. Literally. LOL.
I just set my iPhone to not ring for unknown callers. Settings > Phone > Silence unknown callers. It’ll only ring for your contacts and numbers you’ve called recently. They can still leave voicemail, but for whatever reason, telemarketers hardly ever do that.
but you look like you need viagra
That's because your number got leaked 🤣
The only time they enforced that law was when Homer Simpson used a robodialer on the entire town of Springfield
The vast majority of these calls are from fake numbers, sometimes even my very own. I wish there was a way to collect.
Diabetus!
Most of the calls I get are for scammers who don't care about the 1991 law.
Then put your number on the National Do Not Call Registry and log the calls, the send the price. $3k ez and if not then it can get investigated ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ not our job to put the people on their place if the law ruins their lives for them
FYI: Your car warranty will have you speak to 3 different people (screeners) before you get a salesman. That guy will only give you the monthly charge, never the total. I can do math in my head (yup, I'm a genius). That warranty will cost you about $5k per year. I can get a lot of repairs for $5k.
1) Enable "Do Not Disturb" on your phone.
2) Don't answer unrecognized numbers. If it's important, they'll leave a voicemail.
3) Put your phone on "vibrate", turn down your ringer volume, or simply use a less annoying ringer.
4) Move on with your day.
You can set your phone to only ring for people already in your contacts. Sometimes this is called "White Listing"
The very first time you sued you got a $3,000 settlement? Not believable, considering he's trying to get you to buy his program. The only thing that reduced these robocalls for me was to answer the phone and immediately hang up, not allowing them to leave a voice message. Now I only get 4-6 calls per week.
How do you think he made those 3000? By selling that promise.
I use android, the vast majority of the scam calls seem to be filtered out. I've only received maybe 4-6 scam calls in the past 4 years I've owned an android device. It's not perfect but it does seem to be pretty efficient at filtering out unwanted noise.
I just don't answer the phone, they can leave a message if it's that important. I keep the phone in another room away from me for days sometimes and I forget about it and the battery goes dead. Win win.
How is that a win?
@@DavidKen878 It is for me.
@@eeyore6532 Someone calls and leaves a message, but you don't get around to checking it for days. That's if they leave a message. Again, how is that a win? One day you're going to get a call that you wish you answered.
I do the same, too.
Too many scam callers. Now I've silenced my phone and check voicemails every night or two.
So your away from your phone for days.....I'm not seeing the win here except maybe from the robocaller.
Many of them call from other countries so they don’t care about our laws.
Let's class action sue the phone providers!
Go on, waste your time with that stupid lawsuit to collect a whole $2.50 then owe tax on your kings ransom. All you will net is a nickel wile the lawyers will be the ones to get the lions share of any settlement.
I don't even answer my home phone anymore.
Then what's the point in having it?
Status symbol. Just like the carphones in the 80's.
@@UpcomingJedi That doesn't make sense lol
To find the cellphone?@@DavidKen878
I just use do not disturb but allow contacts only.
Great information! 😊
You don't even need robo calls to drive you up the wall. I've had issues even with telemarketers from the same place call me 1 - 2 times a week in my country the one time. And would not take me off their list. Eventually blew a referee whistle into the phone. Problem solved. Never been bugged by them again.
They have this law in Canada, US, and most of the EU countries. Robot calls are illegal except for government emergency services, and political parties. These must be used for specific reasons.
The problem with many of the robot calls trying to sell services, or Scam people are from out of the country originating from where the US, Canada, some others, and the EU countries have no legal way to prosecute the callers. I've received up to 10 per day which is very disturbing. I've contacted the telephone company I deal with. They put a logger service on my telephone service. They were able to tell me many of the calls I've been getting were from India, Malaysia, Russia, Turkey, and China. They told me all they can do is lodge a complaint to the carriers of the callers, but probably nothing will be done.
Right
Since when did laws stop things from happening? Even the Do Not Call List is rarely enforced. It's not a pressing issue.
Doesn't matter that it's illegal. That law is currently unenforceable and almost universally flouted.
I’m in Canada and our telephone numbers are structured the same as American numbers so they assume it’s all the same. My funniest one so far is a scammer trying to sell me Medicare. While most of us in Canada have private health insurance, it was funny. Apparently I applied on Marketplace??
LMAOOO
Our congressman gets contributions from the robocallers!
It's partially because anytime you give your number to any business especially the ones where they say they need it so you can get store points to get discounts, are able give you those discounts because they make money by selling your number and info. Robo calls could cut back if it was made illegal to do so
You won't get much money out of them since most of them are coming from third world countries
Good luck on collecting !!!
Before my mom was getting around 75 calls on here cell phone per day.
Then she got a Google Pixel 7 smartphone and I showed her how to setup and use "call screening". She that day she no longer get's those type of calls anymore.
With SS7 signaling and VOIP service being used, the phone numbers tend to be fake or blocked since the VOIP provider had no legal duty to ensure that the calling party provides the correct information on the origin number.
Technically, the VOIP originator or gateway provider is nowadays required to sign the call using STIR/SHAKEN… it’s just that many unscrupulous operators still ignore this requirement. The FCC needs to get to a point where all VOIP calls to the PSTN have to be signed in order to be completed.
Want to make this work? It's very simple. Have the telephone company that connects them charge them. Give the telephone company 10% of every penalty they apply to the scammers and robocallers. They will make it worth their time to actually do the job telecommunications companies SHOULD be doing in the first place.
Sure but they use auto-dial spoofers which generate a fake number then disappear. I am on a the dnd registry. For awhile I was getting about 300 calls a month.
Given the relatively small amounts of these settlements, the law is not acting as a deterrent.
Would be great to have Colorado’s Federal and State elected officials on record regarding what they are doing to strengthen and expand these protections and why they haven’t moved to increase the fines (at a minimum) by the rate of inflation.
Oh, wait. Could it be that these companies are also campaign donors?
Politicians could take proactive steps at eliminating robocalls altogether.. but they still need that resource come Election Day.
Comments like this are so naive. The law doesn't even deter drug dealers. So why would you think it would make a difference here? Thinking companies are making political donations is hilarious. Between that and the phone companies being in on it, I fail to see where any money is being made.
I wouldn’t want to pick that phone up either. 🤢
Lawyers are the root of most of our problems!
These anti-spam call laws are toothless! I just use the "settings" function on my iPhone to silently route any incoming call from a number NOT in my (quite large) contact list straight to voicemail! The VERY few times it IS a call I want, I just return the call.
Yep. Settings > Phone > Silence unknown callers
They need include voip calls
Getting contacted by several parties in the past month for somebody that doesn't live in my house anymore. But I don't have caller ID turned on because my mother insists it costs too much money. One call even dialed outside of the 9 PM to 8 AM "quiet range". Also, I don't even have the heart to tell them I'm on the do-not-call thing.
what about a person that calls you to sell you sometihing?
Well thats not a robocall
Hope they do it for all smartphones ASAP forever and ever not just during election season but 24 7 365 forever and ever pretty please
Where is the link
It's missing! 😆
Clean your phone Peggy… please..
Lol
This is why I do not use a cell phone at home. Nor own an archaic landline like that lady has. Problem literally solved.
Good luck collecting that money from India and proving the company behind it. Those companies are all in India/Pakistan. Now you know why no one has pursued this.
25 in 10 days? I wish!!! I've had over 2000 calls in two months
Haven't answered a unknown number in years. Goes straight to VM then deleted a week later.
Yes, you can sue them
Laws and regulations mean ZILCH unless there is enforcement.
That's the issue. Lack of enforcement.
That phone looks like it was the origin of covid
Sometimes location matters. I have two US phone numbers, one from South Carolina and one from California. My South Carolina number gets spam/scam calls all the time. The California number never gets them.
I had medicare calling everyday and im 48
oh gawd, please stop showing close ups of that crusty old phone
I tell them they get a bill for the next call my time is worth money
That Wireless landline phone seen better days. Looks like it's never been cleaned since the day she bought it. 😅
Dust off your answering machine. Screen your calls. I use a Steven Hawking voice to let them know its not going to be a person answering. They will stop calling. It wont cost you $47. Indian callers are immune so you are just wasting your time threatening them.
I don’t get one call a day let alone 30 that’s insane
First of all you shouldn’t answer. That routes your call to a real person and now they know that you’ll answer so they’ll keep calling.
Merry Beth I haven’t had any calls for you lately did the state police finally tell you to stop giving out my number to legitimate local businesses and telling them to call asking for you?😂 hundreds of calls and texts last year please make it stop this is a form of harassment when someone gets your number that doesn’t like you and pays ppl to sign it up for all this stuff.
How do I lure these people to call me so I can make money?
Go to websites that refer you to insurance companies. They usually want a phone number to call you for rates, then they take that number and sell it to every data broker in the country. Soon they will be calling you constantly.
@@Thunder_Dome45 How easy is it to get them to settle?
@@ThePeterDislikeShow I don't know about that.
Looks like we have another get rich quick entrepreneur here….
Wow. You truly believe anything you see on TV. No questions asked.
Where is the link referred to in the video?
How can you enforce it? The calls come from IP lines that are likely from out of the country.
The problem is some calls ain’t in USA some are in India
This is happening to me too. I have registered with the federal do not call registration, buy they still call. I also get calls that hang up as soon as I answer. Now my ringer is off and I never answer my phone. Never. ... my voice mail message is very long and tells you to send me a text.
I have a land line, (part of internet package plan), that I use to find my cell phone only.. Yet, I get dozens of calls/day
If you answer and interact with these calls, they will be more numerous.
I like robo calls that have a half dozen different numbers
So this is a Comercial?
I buy homes flippers are the new telephone parasites. Most of them are local. Also, get your number on the DO NOT CALL REGISTRY.
That's my phone in the thumbnail
Well you'd also be surprised how many debts you have that you never had. They call me constantly.
Cell phones are not smart phone sadly.
How can you reach people in India?!
Ya I got the same problem. It doesn't matter what day nor what time of day. I've never once anwsered. I'm afraid to. Any suggestions?👍🇨🇦
Change your number. What you scared of?
3:26 Im sorry whats on the bottom of the screen. yall should drop it in the description. the EMail that is
I get calls where they say nothing, after I answer in a different voice than my normal one. How do you find out who the caller is, when they spoof their number?
Why do you answer in a different voice?
Clean your phones🤮
Could. But won't happen. No way to trace back when they have a phone number that is not in sevice
DIABEETUS?!
I just use do not disturb but allow contacts only.
0:21 You have a news crew coming over to your house to record video of your phone ringing and you don’t have the presence of mind to clean or replace your nasty phone? I’d be embarrassed, especially after they use it as the thumbnail on RUclips. 😒
No if only we can do something like this with emails, text messages AND especially entities like auto dealerships and makers collecting our data, packaging our data and selling our data.
Stop the data mining molesters!
I just resort to blocking numbers if they don't leave a voicemail within 30mins.
That's dumb. One day you're going to end up blocking the wrong nunber.
@DavidKen878 If they don't leave a voicemail, then they're not important. That simple. Plus, i have an email address to if needed since I know to expect.
Anybody that's got an antiquated phone like the one in the thumbnail deserves to be robocalled
I have one of those old phones for when the power goes out, making cordless phones useless and we live in a place with very bad coverage with a cell phone. Plus they make great boat anchors.🤣
Not working in anyway!!
My question is does the TCPA apply in a situation not where they want to sell you something, but when they want to buy something from you? I get a lot of “we wanna buy your home phone calls” and it sure would be nice to get them to stop.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the FCC fined robocallers $208 mil and only collected $6800. Does that answer your question.
@@DavidKen878 No. This snswer has nothing to do with what I asked
They seem to reduce as I respond with escalating prices well out of the market.
Q: "Are you interested in selling your house at 123 Foobar Pl?" (Or some similar speech.)
A: "$1.2M." (For a house that would sell for maybe $150K; use your own numbers. Next call answered with $1.4M, and so on.)
Maybe the caller says s/he needs to speak to a manager. I say if you want to buy it, that's the price, as is, in cash, mail the contract. Good day. And hang up. I point out that I'm entirely serious; a buyer (who still would have to be qualified) willing to pay several times market, in cash, would allow us to find other suitable digs, and would compensate for some percentage of the total spam nuisance.
Almost all of these calls are robodialed but have an actual person on the other end. They get tired quickly with such numbers.
@@MaxPower-11 You're clearly not too bright. The answer to your question is it doesn't matter. The TCPA is rarely enforced.
@@annelarrybrunelle3570 I did the exact same thing, I told them they wouldn't like the price I want for my home and gave them a ridiculous number, they haven't called back.
Now they hijack local numbers though. Unless you can get them to divulge their business, which I assume isn't easy and would often reaquire you supplying them with your own personal info, I don't see much in the way of profiting from this.
Answering the calls is literally the worst thing you can do. Besides giving them information which leads to them siphoning money from your bank account.
3:25 *email - um, where???*
25 in 8-10 days??? I get 10 a day
Just tell them put me on the do not call list....
THAT DONT WORK
Robocallers ignore the Do Not Call List, because no one enforces that requirement. I've been plagued by robocalls despite being on the Do Not Call List for many years.
this story made me giggle like a schoolgirl. there is no backbone to this law...its as useless as a $2 watch. you have to be stoned on some jamacian stuff to think anything is going to happen
If you’re not in my contact list it’s blocked or sent to VM silenced.
How to get sometimes two or three robo calls a day. If you want to help for me to get money from them then that would be great because I can really use it to help others I hope
I get paid???
I have a spam filter on my phone!😄
Yes, but how to catch.
Old news. Most pf the people know this and its not as good as you think.
Let me call her to help her clean that phone!! 😂😅
It’s not working
So instead of changing her number, she chose to sit by the phone with a pen and pad? 🤦🏽♂️
AWWWW! the fake news gave us a FRIEND lol in this episode we learn there are LAWS on the books THAT ARE NOT ENFORCED.
Hey Peggy! Clean that phone
Change your number
START. SCREENING. YOUR. CALLS.