The 94-year-old woman and her hair stylist had been friends for 20 years.
Such
good friends, in fact, that when the Tucson, Ariz. woman’s husband died
in 2011, hair stylist Supranom “Addy” Klos was given power of attorney,
according to the Arizona Attorney General’s Office.
But then, in 2014, money started to disappear from the
94-year-old’s life savings. Eventually nearly all of the woman’s
savings — some $300,000 — had vanished, prosecutors said. And it was
Klos who was stealing it.
It took Klos only months to
gamble away nearly all of her friend and client’s life savings, Arizona
Attorney General Mark Brnovich said.
And it took an Arizona jury only about two hours to find
Klos guilty, convicting the hair stylist on one count of fraudulent
schemes, three counts of theft, one count of fraudulent use of a credit
card and one count of unlawful use of power of attorney.
Brnovich described the 94-year-old as a vulnerable adult with dementia.
What Klos didn’t spend on gambling, she spent on dental implants and a new car, according to the attorney general.
Klos
was taken into custody after the verdict, the attorney general said.
She will be sentenced to a minimum of four years in prison.
One in six vulnerable adults is victimized
to such an extent that he or she loses a third — or more — of his or
her assets, according to the Arizona attorney general. Emotional damage
from being the victim of those crimes can shave as much as three years
off a victim’s life.
Fraud and exploitation victimizing seniors is an expensive — and expanding — problem.
“Financial
fraud targeting older Americans is a growing epidemic that costs
seniors an estimated $2.9 billion annually,” Sen. Susan Collins (R-Me.),
chair of the Senate Aging Committee, said earlier this year as she introduced a bipartisan bill to protect seniors from fraud.
Law
enforcement became involved in the Arizona case when the woman’s bank
noticed large sums of money withdrawn from the 94-year-old’s savings
account, prosecutors said.
Hundreds of thousands of older Americans fall victim to fraud, financial scams and abuse each year, according to Collins.
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A 94-year-old befriended her hair stylist. It cost her $300,000.
Can't trust anybody anymore. It's so sad.
ReplyDeleteI agree StandUp here is one case that represents many that will go without justice.
ReplyDeletePredators are everywhere laying in wait.
I can see how easy it is for immoral, greedy people who provide services to people and yes their pets can develop a long relationship with their clients especially those who have financial value are easy prey for those with a criminal mind.
My parents' POA stole $80K from my parents in order to buy his own house.
ReplyDelete