Sunday, July 28, 2019

Elderly robocall scam victim committed suicide after 'fraudsters' stole life savings

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The Senate Aging Committee heard testimony Wednesday from witnesses and government officials explaining the impact of criminals that are unseen – but heard – over phone lines.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, noted last year that robocallers generated 26 billion unwanted calls reaching Americans’ mobile phones.

She said adding landline outreach grows that number to 48 billion calls.

One of those people on the other line was Marjorie Jones, an 82-year-old woman who committed suicide after giving up her life's savings to phone scammers.

“They told her she had won a large cash prize, and all she had to do was pay the taxes and fees,” Angela Stancik, Jones’ granddaughter, explained to lawmakers.

Stancik said she realized her grandmother was a victim of elder fraud in the last conversation she had with her.

She needed $6,000 “as soon as possible,” and was desperate. The family could never think of a time she needed to borrow money in the past.

“I could hear the panic in her voice, and she was very very afraid.”

Stancik’s father had just wired $8,000 the week prior. He thought someone was scamming her, but given her tone, he wired the $6,000.

Jones killed herself a week later.

“It is clear to us that the circumstances that led to her death were caused by these criminals,” Stancik said through tears.

Her grandmother had bags of receipts in her closet that showed the money sent to unknown accounts, took out a second mortgage on her home, drained her life savings and cashed out all of her life insurance.

Federal authorities busted the elder fraud ring last year, when then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the victims targeted more than 1 million people living in the U.S.

The hearing follows a number of bills and initiatives proposed to help stop unwanted robocalls from reaching Americans on their phones.

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Elderly robocall scam victim committed suicide after 'fraudsters' stole life savings

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