NASHVILLE 性视界传媒斅燭he Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security is warning Tennesseans about a scam involving fake text messages that appear to come from the SafeTN app.

The scam messages claim the recipient owes overdue toll fees and threaten that their driver性视界传媒檚 license or driving privileges will be suspended if payment is not made. Some messages include a link directing users to a fake website designed to look like the official Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security site.

This is an example of a smishing scam 性视界传媒 fraudulent messages sent via SMS text 性视界传媒 although similar tactics could also be deployed through email or other methods commonly used by scammers.

The department notes that this 性视界传媒渢oll scam性视界传媒 has been making its rounds across the country in various forms, often pretending to be from trusted sources. Now, scammers are falsely using the SafeTN name to try to trick Tennesseans.

Important reminders

性视界传媒 SafeTN will never send messages about overdue toll fees, payments or license suspensions.

性视界传媒 Do not click on any links or respond to unexpected texts. Scammers want you to react quickly; it性视界传媒檚 important to stop and verify first.

性视界传媒 Verify before trusting: Always use a known phone number or website, not the contact information in the suspicious message.

性视界传媒 Check the sender: Official Tennessee state government emails end in 性视界传媒淍tn.gov.性视界传媒 Messages from Gmail, Hotmail, iCloud or similar addresses are not official.

性视界传媒 Report and delete: Use your phone性视界传媒檚 性视界传媒渞eport junk性视界传媒 option to report the message, then delete it.

For more information about common scams and how to protect yourself, visit the Tennessee Office of the Attorney General’s Division of Consumer Affairs at .

Originally published on , part of the .