Recruitment Fraud Warning

Unauthorized individuals claiming to be Glumac or Tetra Tech employees are extending false employment offers to steal money and personal information from job seekers. These scams use legitimate job boards and social media platforms and may use unauthorized Glumac and Tetra Tech logos, employee name, and title. The perpetrators will require an initial investment, such as a payment for work visa, or will send a check that allows them to gain access to the job seeker’s account after the check is deposited.

Glumac and Tetra Tech take this matter seriously. By raising awareness, we hope to prevent job seekers falling victim to these scams. Do not engage if you believe a communication is fraudulent.

Neither Glumac or Tetra Tech will ever request money or credit card information for an applicant to secure a job as an employee or a contractor. Glumac and Tetra Tech also do not require individuals to release personal data—such as an address, social security number, tax documents, or banking information—early in the interview process. Beware of schemes that require the job seeker to create an online account, potentially to collect personal information using a counterfeit website.

Glumac and Tetra Tech representatives communicate and transmit job offers using email addresses that end with either @glumac.com or @tetratech.com. Glumac and Tetra Tech do not conduct job interviews through texting or platforms such as Google Hangouts and usually will conduct a formal job interview prior to extending an offer. Job offers from free webmail accounts—such as yahoo.com, hotmail.com gmail.com, or live.com—likely are not legitimate. Candidates can reach our representatives at a Glumac or Tetra Tech office via a published telephone number.

  • To check the legitimacy of a job, visit glumac.com/careers
  • To report a suspicious job ad or email, contact [email protected] and include as much detail as possible (e.g., job board where the false ad was placed, documentation that will assist us in the investigation)
  • If you believe you have been a victim of a crime, contact the local authorities or the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov
  • For more information on job scams, visit the Federal Trade Commission at https://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0243-job-scams


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