A Miami man accused of flooding consumers with 96 million phone calls touting fake travel deals faces a record proposed US$120 million ($165m) fine from federal regulators, who said he operated the worst robocall spoofing effort they had seen.
Adrian Abramovich tried to trick consumers into answering and listening to his advertising messages, the Federal Communications Commission said in a news release Thursday. The pace of calls works out to an average of more than 1 million per day.
"The FCC is taking major, unprecedented action against what appears to be the most egregious neighbor-spoofing robocalling scheme that we have ever seen," said FCC Chairman Ajit Pai.
Calls appeared to come from local numbers, but those who answered were prompted to "Press 1" to hear about vacation deals, according to the FCC. If they did, consumers were connected to call centers not affiliated with companies mentioned in messages, such as Expedia, TripAdvisor, Marriott and Hilton, according to the agency.
Consumers who did "press 1" were transferred to foreign call centers where live operators attempted to sell vacation packages - often involving timeshares, the FCC said.