They were included in AB51, joining a long list of professionals from
law enforcement to medical providers and even bankers in an effort to
stop the growing problem of seniors in particular being exploited by
everyone from caregivers to scam artists, so-called friends and, most
disturbingly, their own children and other family members.
“Often the children have the power of attorney and mom or dad trusts
them,” said Carrie Embree, Elder Rights Chief for the Nevada Division of
Aging Services. “We see it happen for all sorts of reasons and we don’t
understand.”
While the division is
concerned with a laundry list of abuses ranging from simple neglect to
sexual abuse, financial exploitation is the most common. And, according
to a Journal of General Medicine study in 2014, more often than not, the
perpetrator was a relative.
The
problem isn’t rare either. The Certified Financial Planner Board of
Standards has reported up to 77 percent of their members say they have
experience with a senior subjected to financial exploitation.
Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, whose staff will set up and
monitor the training now required of financial advisers, managers and
brokers, said financial abuse costs victims an estimated $2.9 billion a
year nationwide. She said those brokers, like other financial
professionals such as bankers, must now attend training to learn the
warning signs of exploitation and what to do if they are suspicious.
Diana Foley, securities administrator for the Secretary of State, said
there was “kind of a hole” in the list of those who have to report
suspected abuse.”
Embree said they
were added to the list because those financial managers and advisers
often have a long-standing relationship with the potential victims and
were in a position to spot something wrong.
“They are in a unique position where they can see if when there are
some uncharacteristic financial transactions happening,” she said.
She said that could be anything from a series of withdrawals, showing
the senior may be starting to give away large amounts of money.
“If they’ve known them for six or eight years then suddenly they start doing that, it could be a red flag,” she said.
A report by the National Center on Elder Abuse said financial
exploitation can take many forms including cashing a vulnerable person’s
checks without permission, forging their signature on documents,
stealing possessions or coercing a senior into signing documents such as
contracts, a will or power of attorney.
Financial theft, the report states, is typically between $1,000 and
$5,000 per transaction but can be more extensive ranging up to real
estate transactions.
And it’s far more common than most believe.
A study by Met Life Insurance estimated there are as many as a million victims a year in the U.S.
In Fiscal 2014, there were 6,033 allegations of exploitation and abuse
in Nevada, according to Embree. She said 1,262 of them were confirmed
cases.
In that total were 272 reports
in Carson City, 130 in Douglas and 115 in Churchill counties.
Substantiated reports total 108 in Carson, 42 in Douglas and 50 in
Churchill.
More disturbingly, she
said, experts believe for every case reported another 23 go unreported,
often because senior victims are embarrassed or just don’t want to
accuse a loved one.
Sometimes, she said, they just don’t know who to call for help.
Nationally, according to Adult Protective Services, the typical victim
is 79-89 years old, white, female, frail and cognitively impaired.
“She is trusting of others and may be lonely or isolated,” the agency report states.
Embree said the social isolation is a key risk factor.
If an elder is socially isolated or withdrawn, they’re by themselves,” she said.
That opens the door for any one from a long time friend to a family member or neighbor to gain their trust.
She said poor physical health, dementia and even substance abuse are
risk factors that make those seniors even more vulnerable.
Family members, especially children, are often the perpetrators and
Embree said it’s often because the child involved has “issues going on.”
“Substance abuse issues can really intensify the exploitation,” she said.
They need the money to pay for their drug habit or a gambling habit or
something similar. As a result, 1,288 of the 5,667 case reports involved
the victim’s child, 507 their spouse and 562 another relative.
But caregivers are also high on the list, accounting for 636 of those complaints.
Caregivers, some licensed but others not — like a friend or neighbor
who volunteers to help out — too often take advantage of the senior
victim.
The key, according to Embree,
is to be aware when something involving a senior or other vulnerable
person you know just doesn’t look right and report it.
That report can be made either to the Aging and Disability Services Division at 888-729-0571 or to local law enforcement.
That prompts Elder Protective Services to send a social worker to check
the allegations out and see if there’s enough evidence to believe
something is happening.
“Even if you don’t know, we encourage people to report,” she said.
Full Article & Source:
Working to stop senior exploitation
Brokers and other financial professionals? I'm on the fence on this because financial planners are listed in the #1 category of abusers of the elderly.
ReplyDeleteI am on the fence right next to you. It is the strangest thing !
ReplyDeleteI'm not the fence at all. It WAS a financial planner (Chase Bank in Livermore, CA) who drained my father's bank account containing his life savings. It's been a nightmare.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.facebook.com/pages/Elder-Abuse-Chase-Bank-John-Magel/770459313037278