Monday, December 2, 2013

Elder abuse: Seniors swindled out of $2.9 billion each year


Earlier this year, hired caregiver Melissa Renee Murray bilked an elderly Fort Collins woman out of more than $45,000.
 
A caller pretending to be a granddaughter in need of bail money for a Peruvian jail earlier this month tricked a pair of Fort Collins grandparents out of $16,000.
 
Garry Kohler, a former Windsor business owner, was sentenced to two years in prison Monday after pleading guilty to stealing thousands of dollars from his elderly business partner.
 
To the common eye, these cases are just another instance of theft. To those more trained, they’re yet another example of the most common form of elder abuse. A Colorado law will take effect July 2014 and offer new hope for the sobering plight.
 
More than 60 percent of elder abuse cases — or abuse against older adults — involve financial exploitation. Like many of the cases above, most are perpetrated by someone in a position of trust, typically a family member or caregiver with a “sob story” or access to important financial documents or credit cards, said Helen Davis, coordinator for the Colorado Coalition for Elder Rights and Prevention and a local expert on elder abuse issues.
 
Full Article and Source:
Elder abuse: Seniors swindled out of $2.9 billion each year

3 comments:

  1. Statistics show the vast majority of crimes against the elderly are committed by professional fiduciaries appointed by the court. So, why do people like Helen Davis get to lie about this while people like me have to post anonymously because we are targets of people like Helen Davis and her credentials as an expert?
    Why is she not being investigated for how much money she is getting out of elder abuse?

    ReplyDelete
  2. The statistics are misleading because they don't even include guardianship abuse.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Preying off of the elderly has got to stop.

    ReplyDelete