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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Friday, January 1st in observance of New Year’s Day.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closing at 2PM on Thursday, December 24th in observance of Christmas Eve and will remain closed on Friday, December 25th in observance of Christmas Day. ... Read more

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Thursday, November 26th in observance of Thanksgiving.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Wednesday, November 11th in observance of Veterans Day.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Monday, October 12th in observance of Columbus Day.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Monday, September 7th in observance of Labor Day.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Saturday, July 4th in observance of Independence Day.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Friday, June 19th in observance of Juneteenth.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Monday, May 25th in observance of Memorial Day.

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For the safety of our employees and members, all Jeanne D’Arc branches will be open at 9 a.m. on Friday, March 6th. Our Member Contact Center will remain open during its regular business hours – if you need account assistance, please call us at 978-452-5001. You can also access your accounts using Online and Mobile Banking, as well as our ATMs. We appreciate your understanding and apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

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Due to scheduled system maintenance, our Call24 automated phone system will be temporarily unavailable on Monday, February 16th. For account access, Online & Mobile Banking as well as ATMs will be available during this time. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Monday, February 16th in observance of Presidents’ Day.

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Our Member Contact Center will be closing at 4:30PM on Tuesday, February 3rd, due to a staff event. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

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The 2026 MoneyStrong Scholarship is now open. Don’t miss your chance – apply by Friday, April 3rd.

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All Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union locations will be closed on Monday, January 19th in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

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LinkedIn Scammers Love It When You…

A Black woman with natural hair looks at her cell phone.

While LinkedIn is an essential tool for professional growth, it has also become a high-value target for social engineering, corporate espionage, and financial fraud. Scammers thrive on the platform’s inherent culture of trust.

Here are some ways professionals unintentionally assist bad actors. Believe us, scammers love it when you…

  • …Accept connections from people you’ve never met. The “open networker” mindset is a gift to fraudsters. Accepting a request from a stranger because they have a professional-looking headshot and a mutual connection provides them with immediate access to your contact list. This allows them to warm up your colleagues by using your name as a point of credibility in secondary attacks.
  • …Over-share internal corporate details. Scammers and spies monitor updates for mentions of new software migrations, internal project codenames, or organizational shifts. Posting a celebration of a new vendor partnership, to take one example, could provide a blueprint for a business email compromise attack.
  • …List your full managerial hierarchy. While detailed profiles help recruiters, they also help spies map your organization. By listing exactly who you report to and who reports to you, you provide the social graph necessary for a scammer to craft a bogus “request from the CEO” directed at your subordinates.
  • …Engage with viral personal polls and surveys. Many innocuous-seeming polls are designed to harvest answers to common security challenge questions. Engaging with these doesn’t just clutter your feed; it potentially hands over the keys to your private accounts.
  • …Abandon your inbox to “ghost” recruiters. Scammers often pose as recruiters for high-paying, remote roles to collect resumes. These documents contain your home address, phone number, and work history—everything needed for identity theft.

 

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