Warning to Stay Vigilant for Government Impersonation Scams
Summary
The Washington Public Disclosure Commission issued a consumer alert on April 1, 2026 warning Washington residents about government impersonation scams in which fraudsters send phishing emails claiming to be from the PDC to collect personal or financial information. The advisory identifies common red flags including unusual sender addresses, unexpected requests for personal information, spelling or formatting errors, and urgency tactics that compel immediate action. The PDC advises recipients to navigate directly to the organization's official website or call 360-753-1111 to verify message authenticity.
“The PDC is aware that scammers may seek to impersonate agency staff in emails in an attempt to collect personal or financial information.”
About this source
GovPing monitors Washington PDC for new government & legislation regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.
What changed
The Washington Public Disclosure Commission issued a consumer protection advisory on April 1, 2026 alerting Washington residents to government impersonation scams. Fraudsters are sending phishing emails that appear to be from the PDC to collect personal or financial information from recipients. The advisory does not create new regulatory obligations but identifies red flags such as unusual sender addresses, unexpected requests for personal data, spelling errors, and pressure tactics. Affected parties should verify any unexpected government communications by navigating directly to official agency websites or calling published phone numbers to confirm authenticity before responding.
The advisory is informational in nature and does not impose compliance requirements on regulated entities. Organizations may use this guidance to enhance employee awareness training on phishing and impersonation fraud schemes.
Archived snapshot
Apr 22, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Posted on April 01, 2026 As a reminder, we strongly advise everyone to remain vigilant for suspicious or unexpected messages, regardless of their apparent origin from a government agency, business, or any other organization, including the Public Disclosure Commission. The PDC is aware that scammers may seek to impersonate agency staff in emails in an attempt to collect personal or financial information. Cybercriminals conducting scams seeking payment or personal information frequently impersonate official communications – such as emails or text messages – to establish trust; this is often referred to as a phishing scam. Be vigilant for red flags such as unusual sender addresses or phone numbers, unexpected requests for personal information, spelling or formatting errors, or a sense of urgency that compels immediate action. When in doubt, navigate directly to the organization’s official website or contact them through a trusted phone number to verify the message’s authenticity. Call the PDC at 360-753-1111 if you want to verify that a message came from us.
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