Fraud against older persons, including scams in which federal
agencies are impersonated, costs victims nearly $3 billion a year, says a
report from the Senate Special Committee on Aging.
A Social Security impersonation scam is the most common one reported
to the committee’s fraud hotline, it said, and an IRS impersonation scam
came in seventh. That “involves scammers posing as employees of the
Social Security Administration in order to fraudulently take money or
obtain personally identifiable information (PII) from victims. In one
common version of this scam, victims are told that their Social Security
number has been linked to a crime and the situation can only be
resolved by sending payment or PII,” it said.
An IRS scam had been
at the top for years; in it, impersonators often accuse victims of
owing back taxes that must be paid immediately and after an initial
“payment” is made, con artists often convince victims to make additional
payments to prevent arrest or other actions.
However, there has been a decrease in that scam as enforcement
efforts by the IRS and the Justice Department have stepped up. Meanwhile
the Social Security scam has been growing in frequency—complaints to
the FTC more than doubled over 2018-2019—and recently expanded to
include not just fake emails and phone calls but also official-looking
documents purporting to be from the agency. The SSA and its inspector
general’s office recently launched a new campaign against that scam, as
well.
Also high on the list:
* robocalls and other unsolicited calls, some of which involve
spoofing to make it appear that the call is coming from a federal
agency;
* sweepstakes scams which aim to convince victims that they have won a
large sum of money through the lottery, but must make up front payments
for taxes and fees before collecting their prize;
* computer tech support scams in which callers claim to represent a
well-known technology company in an attempt to convince victims to
provide them with access to their computers; and
* the “grandparent scam” in which one of a pair of callers pretends to
be a family member, often a grandchild, and claims to be in urgent need
of money to cover an emergency and another impersonates an authority
figure, such as a police officer pretending to confirm the story or
defense attorney to make the request for money.
Full Article & Source:
Agency Impersonation Scams, Other Fraud a $3 Billion Problem
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