Storm-chaser alerts · South Dakota
When a storm hits, fraudulent contractors race in. They form an LLC the week after, knock on doors with cash-only deals, and dissolve before any complaints can be filed. Here's what's active in South Dakota right now and how to protect yourself.
South Dakota is in an active disaster window
1 severe ·
Out-of-state contractors have already started moving in. Verify before you sign anything.
Active declarations
- SEVERE
Wildfire — QURY FIRE
Declared 2026-03-13 (2 months ago) · active through 2026-09-09
femaAffected counties (FIPS): 00033
How storm-chaser fraud works
Six red flags. If three or more match the contractor at your door, walk away.
- 1LLC formed within 90 days of the stormA new business entity formed right after the declaration is the single strongest predictor. Real local contractors have years of public records.
- 2Out-of-state license plates, no local addressTrucks from three states away. PO boxes instead of physical offices. Door-to-door knocks before the dust settles.
- 3Cash-only or insurance-check-only demandsWants the insurance check signed over directly. Refuses credit card, refuses a contract, refuses to wait for the adjuster.
- 4High-pressure same-day signature"This deal is only good today." Real contractors take notes, give you a written estimate, and let you compare.
- 5Will not show a current state licenseOr shows one from a different state. Or one that was suspended. Verify the number against your state's license board before signing.
- 6Other entities tied to the same agent or addressStorm chasers often run multiple LLCs that fold in sequence. Search the registered agent's name and the principal address — if multiple companies show up, that's the pattern.
Check before you sign
Earthmove runs a 30-second background check on any contractor — license, business history, complaints, court records, and storm-chaser pattern detection in South Dakota.
Check a contractor →