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Pushy Strangers Fishing for Details? - +44 113 403 4367 (0113 403 4367)
Summary — +441134034367
Expert Opinion
Reports highlight callers starting with dodgy openers like 'Are you the man of the house?' or claiming ties to firms such as British Gas or D&G to fish for bank details. These interactions often turn aggressive, with swearing or abrupt hang-ups when challenged, amid noisy call centre vibes suggesting overseas scams. Folks wisely refuse and block, spotting the Indian accent and sort code ploys as red flags. Silent calls and background chatter scream harassment too. To stay safe, never share personal info, hang up quick, and report to Action Fraud or your provider—keeps these nuisances at bay without a fuss.
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Rate this number — +441134034367
Recent Reports for 0113 403 4367
A missed call stayed on the line until voicemail launched, with only a call‑centre background audible. Based on previous notes, I'm labeling this number as dangerous.
Scammers from India, and they’re pretty incompetent.
No sound heard; call was blocked.
The call opened with “Are you the man of the house?” When I kept saying “hello”, he swore strongly. Result!!! :)
I didn't pick up.
Unsolicited call flagged as spam.
The caller, an Indian‑accented woman claimed to represent British Gas, asked for the homeowner and boiler status, recited a script about coverage, then requested my sort code from the cheque book. I asked her to repeat the company name, told her I'm on the TPS and doubted her identity; she responded with a disappointed “Oh, OK”.
Continuing my earlier note about the 'British Gas' call – it was excessively long, with a huge box of tiny text that only let you fill half of it. I heard a noisy call‑centre in the background, likely a scam operation in India using a spoofed number. I hope the agent isn’t punished by her supervisor for being disbelieved; if my guess is right, I’ll leave it to Scam Interceptors to shut them down and free those duped into taking jobs there.
A person rang requesting “the lady of the house”, claimed my appliances were covered, offered a new helpline, and demanded my six‑digit sort code from the cheque book. I declined politely and the gentleman hung up. He sounded Asian with loud call‑centre background.
A gentleman claiming to represent D&G asked for my banking info; I courteously directed him elsewhere.
A call about health insurance tried to collect my details; I declined and they hung up.