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FCC fines another robocaller $82 million as it seeks end to caller ID spoofing

The telemarketer made more than 21 million robocalls in three months.

Marrian Zhou Staff Reporter
Marrian Zhou is a Beijing-born Californian living in New York City. She joined CNET as a staff reporter upon graduation from Columbia Journalism School. When Marrian is not reporting, she is probably binge watching, playing saxophone or eating hot pot.
Marrian Zhou
Man screaming into mobile phone

Robocalls can be annoying.

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Another aggressive telemarketer is getting punished.

The Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday fined robocaller Philip Roesel and his companies more than $82 million for illegal caller ID spoofing. Roesel made more than 21 million robocalls over a three-month period from late 2016 through early 2017, according to an FCC release.

Roesel used his companies, Wilmington Insurance Quotes and Best Insurance Contracts, to market health insurance and generate leads for insurance products he sold, the FCC said. Spoofing a robocall means someone else's phone number is displayed when a telemarketer makes calls. The practice makes it hard to annoyed consumers to make complaints and difficult for police to track him down.

FCC has focused on combating robocalls and caller ID spoofing recently. In May, the agency fined Adrian Abramovich $120 million for robocalls. Abramovich allegedly made nearly 100 million robocalls to sell "exclusive" vacation deals.

"Make no mistake about it: Penalizing those who spoof caller ID information and flood Americans' phones with unlawful robocalls must be a component of any effective strategy for combating this scourge," FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said in an email statement.

Wilmington Insurance Quotes and Best Insurance Contracts didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.