MD Attorney General Brian Frosh joined 45 other state AGs in calling for tech companies to crack down on the sale of fake vaccine cards.

A new scam tied to the coronavirus pandemic is targeting Marylanders online, and the state's top cop is warning residents.

Some people may be tempted to buy fake COVID-19 vaccination record cards to avoid getting the COVID-19 vaccine, but the FBI warns that it's illegal, as well as dangerous. In some cases, thieves are using the images people have posted on social media of their Centers for Disease Control-issued vaccinations cards to sell them online.

Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh on Wednesday warned residents not to share photos of their card.

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"Reminder: Do not post a copy of your #VaccineCard online," Frosh tweeted. "This card has your full name, date of birth, and where and when you got the vaccine. Thieves can use the information on your card to steal your personal information and commit fraud."

The FBI has begun investigating a growing trend of online retailers and individuals touting fake vaccination cards for sale, as well as posts encouraging people to print their own cards at home, according to a statement. In addition to violating federal law, the fake cards may put people's health ask risk if an unvaccinated person misrepresents themselves as having protection against the coronavirus.

"When entering schools, mass transit, workplaces, gyms, or places of worship, you put yourself and others around you at risk of contracting COVID-19," the FBI said.

Listings for fake or blank vaccination cards bearing the CDC logo have popped up on sites such as Twitter, eBay and Shopify. More than two dozen attorneys general from across the United States sent a letter to the retailers April 1 asking for immediate action from the platforms to prevent them from being used as a "vehicle to commit these fraudulent deceptive acts that harm our communities."

Frosh and 45 other state attorneys general recently issued a letter to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Shopify CEO Tobias Lütke, and eBay CEO Jamie Iannone regarding the fake vaccination cards being marketed on their platforms. Read more at Patch