Two-thirds of financial crimes against the elderly are
perpetrated by family, friends of other trusted individuals, Wells Fargo survey
finds
May 8, 2018 @ 2:57 pm
By Bruce
Kelly
Financial fraud against the elderly is most
often perpetrated by those closest to the victims: family members, friends or
other trusted individuals, according to a new survey.
While 68% of older investors believe that a
stranger would be the likely perpetrator of financial exploitation against
them, the reality is starkly different, according to Wells Fargo & Co., which released the
results of its elder needs survey on Tuesday morning.
Two-thirds of financial crimes agains the elderly are committed by those who
are closest to the victims, the survey found.
Nearly one in five Americans 65 and older have
been impacted by elder financial abuse, and each year as much as $36.5 billion is lost to
financial exploitation, criminal fraud and caregiver abuse, according to the
survey.
The survey found that typical types of abuse
include using ATM cards and stealing checks to withdraw money from the victim's
accounts. Abuse by in-home care providers can also include keeping change from
errands, paying bills which don't belong to the vulnerable adult, asking the
elderly client to sign falsified time sheets, spending their work time on the
phone and not doing what they are paid to do, according to the survey.
The survey, which was conducted by a
third-party, was based on interviews with 784 older Americans, ages 60 or older
who had at least $25,000 in investible assets. The survey also included 798 adult
children, ages 45 to 59 with at least $25,000 in investible assets, who
communicate regularly with a parent.
Meanwhile, strangers have plenty of scams to
trick elderly individuals into giving up money, personal information, or
property, according to Wells Fargo.
Those include "government scams,"
"granny scams," "prize and sweepstakes fraud" and
"sweetheart fraud."
In government scams, the scammers pose as
government officials requiring their victims to wire cash or use prepaid debits
or gift cards to pay bogus IRS tax bills. Or they may provide sham Medicare
services at makeshift mobile clinics in order to bill insurance companies, according
to Wells Fargo.
Playing on the emotions of grandparents,
fraudsters "identify themselves as grandchildren calling or emailing about
an emergency situation" and plead for money.
In prize and sweepstakes fraud, the victim
will receive a fake telemarketing call and be informed he or she won a lottery
or sweepstakes but must pay taxes on the jackpot before claiming the prize
money.
And in sweetheart fraud, elders are conned
into trusting a new friend that they meet in person or through social media
with the false promise of love and companionship. The romantic partner then
swindles them out of money and/or property before disappearing.
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