Financial
advisers now have more power to stop scammers from targeting senior
citizens. The Safe Seniors Financial Protection Act went into effect
Aug. 1.
It creates a stronger partnership between those advisers and the Minnesota Commerce Department.
"Telephone and email scams are growing, every day there's more and
more of them," said Mary McDougall, a wealth management adviser and
senior vice president for Merrill Lynch.
McDougall sees firsthand how frequently seniors are taken advantage of by both strangers and relatives.
"My guess is one out of four of my clients has had some kind of request from their children," she said.
The requests can amount to tens of thousands of dollars.
"I may be able to say that might not be a good idea and if they
insist on it then this law will allow me to help them by asking the
state to investigate," said McDougall.
The new law gives broker-dealers and investment advisers the power to
report to the Department of Commerce when they see someone trying to
financially exploit the elderly or vulnerable adults.
They can also freeze transactions on the account for up to 15 days
while investigators look into it. If they need more time, investigators
can request the transaction delay continue for another 10 days.
"That’s a great backstop and I’m glad it's there," said McDougall.
She told 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS that one of the biggest ways seniors can
protect themselves is talking to people, whether it's tax, financial or
legal advisers, or getting advice from neighbors and other family
members.
"Being able just to talk about it before it happens is a great thing
to establish as a norm," she said. "I think would help stop a lot of
things."
McDougall believes this law will help with those conversations. It
allows financial professionals to loop in a third party, someone who the
victim trusts, to talk it through.
She told us her firm already has in-house investigators who look into
suspected abuse. If they find it happening, they already report it to
the state.
Full Article & Source:
New Law Protecting Against Senior Financial Exploitation Goes Into Effect
I just hope this new law doesn't accidentally (?) protect financial advisers more.
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