Hello, this may be a scam call. There are formal service procedures for the People's Court to serve summonses. The primary way to serve summons is for the parties to sign for it in person. Telephone notification is not a method of service. It requires you to go to the court to serve it directly. It is also very simple to identify this type of scam
1. If the call is an automated voice call, it must be a scammer. The court's notification to collect the summons must be done manually via telephone.
2. When notified by the court to collect the subpoena, it will definitely tell you the case number of the case, when to collect it, and where to collect it. The place to collect the subpoena must be at the court. Anyone who cannot provide the above information is a liar.
3. There is another way to identify. Some fraud calls are artificial rather than voice at the beginning. You can ask the other party: Which district court is it from? Because most lawsuits are handled in grassroots people's courts, such as The People's Court of XX District is not the court in your district and usually does not have jurisdiction.
4. Requesting bank account number, transfer or payment of fees, especially if the account name required to be transferred is an individual rather than an organization Whoever has the wrong name must be a liar.
5. If the call cannot be returned, it must be a scammer. Some criminals use number-changing software