Marjorie Jones trusted the man who called to tell her she’d won a
sweepstakes prize, saying she could collect the winnings once she paid
the taxes and fees. After she wired the first payment, he and other
callers kept adding conditions to convince her to send more money.
As
the scheme progressed, Jones, who was legally blind and lived alone in a
two-story house in Moss Bluff, Louisiana, depleted her savings, took
out a reverse mortgage and cashed in a life insurance policy. She didn’t
tell her family, not even the sister who lived next door.
Scammers
often push victims to keep promised winnings a secret, says an
investigator who helped unravel this sinister effort to exploit an
82-year-old woman.
Her family didn’t realize something was wrong
until she started asking to borrow money, a first for a woman they
admired for her financial independence. But by then it was too late,
says Angela Stancik, one of Jones’s granddaughters. Jones had lost all
of her life savings — hundreds of thousands of dollars.
About one week after calling Stancik at the family business in Ganado, Texas, to borrow $6,000, Jones committed suicide.
That
was May 4, 2010. When family members went to her home, they found a
caller-ID filled with numbers they didn’t recognize and three bags of
wire transfer receipts in her closet. Jones had $69 left in her bank
account.
Some 5 million older Americans are financially exploited
every year by scammers like the ones who targeted Jones. The elderly are
also suffering at the hands of greedy, desperate or drug addicted
relatives and friends, among others.
The total number of victims is increasing as baby boomers retire and
their ability to manage trillions of dollars in personal assets
diminishes. One financial services firm estimates seniors lose as much
as $36.5 billion a year. But assessments like that are “grossly
underestimated,” according to a 2016 study by New York State’s Office of
Children and Family Services. For every case reported to authorities,
as many as 44 are not. The study found losses in New York alone could be
as high as $1.5 billion.
The CDC drew attention to elder
exploitation as a public health problem in a 2016 report, citing
groundbreaking research two decades earlier by Mark Lachs. Now co-chief
of the Division of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine at Weill Cornell
Medicine and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, Lachs says elder abuse
victims — including those who suffer financial exploitation — die at a
rate three times faster than those who haven’t been abused. It’s a
“public health crisis,” he warns.
“I knew these crimes were
killing people,” says Elizabeth Loewy, who directed the elder abuse unit
at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. As her exploitation cases
steadily rose to hundreds per year, she says, “so many family members
told me, ‘I can’t prove it, but this killed him.’” (Click to Continue)
Full Article & Source:
How criminals steal $37B a year from America’s elderly
Robo calls are an example of how easily the elderly get taken in. The FCC is trying to stop them, but if people don't report these calls, they don't have much to work with. Report every robo call you get to the FCC at this website: https://consumercomplaints.fcc.gov/hc/en-us
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