Risk:High — A high-risk screen like this should be treated as a likely scare tactic, not a routine legal notice.
Install the app:Open the app and verify suspicious content in one scan.
Police summons attachment scam in 2026: how to spot it fast
A high-risk screen like this should be treated as a likely scare tactic, not a routine legal notice. The strongest clue is a claimed police authority with a name and job title, plus references to an investigation and a police case file, which is a common pattern in extortion or pressure to open an attachment. Another clear signal is the visible download button for an attachment labeled "policejní_soud_331_1.jpg". A supposed police or court warning delivered this way is designed to push a fast click before you stop to verify it. The Czech wording also matters. The texts read like an unsolicited notice and include suspicious warnings, which increases the chance that this is meant to frighten the recipient into acting quickly. Warning signs to focus on:
- Claimed police authority, including a specific name and function, tied to an investigation and police file.
- A prominent download button for the attachment "policejní_soud_331_1.jpg".
- Czech-language message text that feels like an unexpected official warning and creates pressure.
What to do next:
- Do not open the attachment, download the file, or reply to the sender.
- Do not send money, documents, or personal data based on the message.
- Verify independently through official police contact channels you find yourself, not through links or numbers in the message.
- Screenshot the message and keep the headers or metadata if available in case you need to report it.
- Scan the content before taking any action. Verify suspicious content in one scan with ScamBuster AI.
If a message uses police identity, mentions an investigation, and pushes you toward a file download, assume risk first and verify before any transfer or response.
Most common warning signals
- A high-risk screen like this should be treated as a likely scare tactic, not a routine legal notice.
- The strongest clue is a claimed police authority with a name and job title, plus references to an investigation and a police case file, which is a common pattern in extortion or pressure to open an attachment.
- Another clear signal is the visible download button for an attachment labeled "policejní_soud_331_1.jpg".
What to do now
Further reading
- 2026 Warning: Fake Banking and Payment Portals Steal Logins
- 2026 screen check: likely safe health ad, but verify before you trust it
- 2026 screen check: 3 warning signs before you send any money
FAQ
How do I detect risk quickly?
Check domain mismatch, urgency pressure, and requests for sensitive data.
Can I verify this safely?
Yes. Open the official site manually and verify outside the original message.
What should I do after suspicion?
Pause payments, rotate credentials, and contact official support.