In February 2019, McKnights’s Senior Living reported, citing a report
just released from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) that
financial elder fraud reports had quadrupled since only 2013, reaching
$1.7 billion in actual losses or attempted thefts, and those figures
were for the year 2017.
The CFPB report is based on suspicious
activity reports (SARs) filed with the federal government by banks,
brokerage firms, insurance companies, and other financial institutions.
It is not only believed that the trend is continuing to rise, but that
these reports still only represent a fraction of the elderly financial
exploitation.
Although the average loss was just over $34,000,
approximately 7% of the reported victims lost over $100,000 each.
One-third of the victims involved people over age 80 years old. The
largest losses reported involved suspects that were people that the
victim already knew either personally or professionally.
The CFPB
has published a number of materials to help protect elderly persons from
financial abuse including numerous reports and materials, even a
financial education placement to remind older adults about financial
issues. The CFPB website is a resource for these materials. In addition,
you can report elder financial abuse to local law enforcement
authorities, as well as federal resources such as the Federal Trade
Commission (www.ftc.gov/complaint) or to the Senate Special Committee on Aging at www.aging.senate.gov/fraud-hotline.
According to the National Adult Protective Services Association, only
approximately 1 out of every 44 cases of financial abuse even gets
reported. Policy makers and regulators are trying to ramp up the focus
on financial elder abuse. New legislative efforts at the state and
federal level, new proposals by state and federal securities regulators
are aimed at helping to prevent financial exploitation of seniors.
Insurance companies and broker-dealer firms all seem to acknowledge and
agree with the goal of protecting seniors from abusive sales practices
when it comes to financial services products. However, the same firms
also lobby to prevent real change such as a fiduciary standard, and also
voice concern that any material change from the status quo in terms of
new regulations will add costs to their business.
The Investment
Fraud Lawyers and Annuity Fraud Lawyers at Haselkorn & Thibaut, P.A.
can handle these cases nationwide. Please call them today for a free
consultation 1-800-856-3352 or visit us at www.investmentfraudlawyers.com.
With over 40 years of combined experience, these former bank and
broker-dealer attorneys are available now to for you, the investor.
Full Article & Source:
Elder Financial Fraud Reaches $1.7 BILLION
No comments:
Post a Comment