A new state law is aimed at reducing how often older Ohioans are
defrauded and increasing financial penalties for those who exploit the
elderly.
The bill, recently signed into law by Ohio Gov.
John Kasich, increases financial penalties for theft from an elderly
person, defined in state law as someone older than 65. It mandates
someone convicted of defrauding an elderly person to pay full
restitution, plus a fine of up to $50,000. The fine will go to county
agencies tasked with investigating elder abuse.
More than 3,630 cases of elder exploitation were reported across Ohio
in fiscal year 2018, according to Ohio Department of Job and Family
Services data. That includes 277 cases in Montgomery County, 191 in
Butler County and 79 in Clark County.
The bill was sponsored by state Sen. Steve Wilson, R-Maineville, who is a retired CEO of LCNB National Bank.
“Day after day we saw our seniors being ripped off,”
Wilson said of his years working at the bank. “It is really an epidemic
of people going after our most frail and fragile citizens. They can
convince them they won the lottery and they haven’t bought a ticket.”
The
new law also adds certain financial workers to the list of people
mandated to tell authorities if they have reasonable cause to believe an
adult has been abused, neglected or exploited.
And it requires the Ohio Attorney General to distribute at lease six
public awareness publications every year informing the public of warning
signs that exploitation might be occurring, how to report suspected
elder fraud, and resources available to prevent or remedy elder fraud or
financial exploitation.
Bank employees notice when a regular
customer who comes in once a week to make a modest withdrawal suddenly
takes out massive sums of money, Wilson said. Often the withdrawals
follow suspicious information the senior received from a family member
or friend.
The new law gives those financial workers requires them
to notify authorities if they fear fraud is occurring. It also gives
those workers information about resources for victims.
Nationwide
seniors lose about $2.9 billion a year to fraud, Wilson said, with only
44 out of every 1,000 cases being reported to authorities.
The law is designed to pay for itself, he said. The hope is that more
cases will be reported, and the increased investigations will be paid
for with the stiffer financial penalties.
“We’re not going to stop elder fraud, but we are absolutely going to put a dent in it with this bill,” Wilson said.
Many
types of elderly fraud exist. One common scheme involves fraudsters
calling seniors and pretending to be relatives in need of emergency
financial assistance. Home repair scams also often target the elderly.
Earlier
this year, an area man was charged with targeting seniors in a scheme
that falsely claimed ownership of their homes with fake property deeds.
He then tried to sell the properties to unsuspecting buyers, prosecutors
allege.
Elder abuse, neglect and exploitation is on the rise
across Ohio, according to a survey Ohio Job and Family Services
Directors’ Association Executive Director Joel Potts cited in support of
Wilson’s bill last year.
Potts said his agency surveyed JFS
offices across the state and 84 percent of respondents reported an
increase in elder abuse cases in the prior two years. More than half
reported an increase in just the prior six months.
Dustin
Holfinger, vice president of state government relations for the Ohio
Bankers League, also spoke in support of the bill. He said the elderly
are vulnerable to fraud because of factors such as isolation, cognitive
decline, physical disability and health issues.
“Elder financial
exploitation … has emerged as one of the most prevalent forms of fraud
in our state,” he said. “Despite its growing prominence, however, only a
small fraction of incidents are detected and reported.”
Full Article & Source:
New Ohio law targets elder fraud as cases on the rise: Here’s how it works
I wish it dealt with guardianship too.
ReplyDelete