Treasury Department official
Timothy Camus told the Senate Aging Committee that more than 10,000
people have reported falling prey to the so-called “IRS impersonation scam” over the last several years — many of them elderly Americans.
Phillip Hatch, who is 81 and testified before the panel via
video, told lawmakers how he received a phone call one day at his home
in Portland, Maine. The caller told him there was a mistake on his tax
returns and federal marshals were coming to arrest him unless he paid
the money. Worried, Hatch did as instructed and went to the local CVS to
purchase iTunes cards. He then read the numbers on the backs of the
cards to the caller. After four hours on the phone with the caller,
Hatch was out $8,000. He told the panel he wishes he hadn’t been “so cooperative.”
Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, chair of the committee, says the criminals who prey on seniors are relentless. “They will harass seniors over and over again until they have drained every penny from their life savings,” she said.
Federal officials, from Treasury and the Federal Trade
Commission, testified about efforts to combat the fraud on senior
Americans.
Last October, more than 50 people were indicted in a scam
that involved call centers in India and bilked thousands of victims out
of more than $270 million. Camus, with the Treasury Inspector General
for Tax Administration office, says it is the largest single domestic
law enforcement action to date related to the IRS impersonation scam.
For some time, scammers had been duping victims into getting
money orders. More recently, however, Camus says his office has seen a
shift to iTunes cards because it’s easier to get the money since the
scammers no longer need middlemen to convert the money orders. “They’re now selling the iTunes cards on the third party market and pocketing the money immediately,” Camus said.
Full Article & Source:
IRS impostor scam top hotline complaint
When an elderly person hears "IRS" on the phone, he/she freezes and believes the IRS is coming for them. The IRS has to prosecute these imposters and take them out.
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