Older Americans are targeted for
fraud because they are the
mostly likely demographic to
have a “nest egg”, own their
home, and have excellent credit…
all of which a fraudster will
attempt to take advantage of.
Also, seniors are less likely to
report fraud.
One of the most damaging scams
against seniors is Medicare
Fraud. Learn more today by
contacting the Office of the
Nevada Attorney General, Nevada
Senior Medicare Patrol program,
at
http://ag.state.nv.us/org/bpa/hhs/smp/smp.htm.
The
National
Center on Elder Abuse
(NCEA), directed by the U.S.
Administration on Aging, is
committed to helping national,
state, and local partners in the
field be fully prepared to
ensure that older Americans will
live with dignity, integrity,
independence, and without abuse,
neglect, and exploitation. The
NCEA is a resource for policy
makers, social service and
health care practitioners, the
justice system, researchers,
advocates, and families.
Top 10 Scams
Targeting Seniors
Financial scams targeting
seniors have become so prevalent
that they’re now considered “the
crime of the 21st century.”
Why? Because seniors are thought
to have a significant amount of
money sitting in their accounts.
Financial scams also often go
unreported or can be difficult
to prosecute, so they’re
considered a “low-risk” crime.
However, they're devastating to
many older adults and can leave
them in a very vulnerable
position with little time to
recoup their losses.
It’s not just wealthy seniors
who are targeted. Low-income
older adults are also at risk of
financial abuse.
And it's not always strangers
who perpetrate these crimes.
Over 90% of all reported elder
abuse is committed by an older
person’s own family members,
most often their adult children,
followed by grandchildren,
nieces and nephews, and others.
Review our list below, so you
can identify a potential scam.
1. Health
Care/Medicare/Health Insurance
Fraud
Every U.S. citizen or permanent
resident over age 65 qualifies
for Medicare, so there is rarely
any need for a scam artist to
research what private health
insurance company older people
have in order to scam them out
of some money.
In these types of scams,
perpetrators may pose as a
Medicare representative to get
older people to give them their
personal information, or they
will provide bogus services for
elderly people at makeshift
mobile clinics, then use the
personal information they
provide to bill Medicare and
pocket the money.
Keep in mind:
No one can come into your home
uninvited.
No one can ask you for personal
information during their
marketing activities.
Always keep all personal
information, such as your
Medicare number, safe, just as
you would a credit card or a
bank account number.
Whenever you have a question or
concern about any activity
regarding Medicare, call
1-800-MEDICAR(E)
2. Counterfeit
Prescription Drugs
Most commonly,
counterfeit drug scams operate
on the Internet, where seniors
increasingly go to find better
prices on specialized
medications.
This scam is
growing in popularity—since
2000, the FDA has investigated
an average of 20 such cases per
year, up from five a year in the
1990s.
The danger is
that besides paying money for
something that will not help a
person’s medical condition,
victims may purchase unsafe
substances that can inflict even
more harm. This scam can be as
hard on the body as it is on the
wallet.
3. Funeral &
Cemetery Scams
The FBI warns about two types of
funeral and cemetery fraud
perpetrated on seniors.
In one approach, scammers read
obituaries and call or attend
the funeral service of a
complete stranger to take
advantage of the grieving widow
or widower. Claiming the
deceased had an outstanding debt
with them, scammers will try to
extort money from relatives to
settle the fake debts.
Another tactic of disreputable
funeral homes is to capitalize
on family members’ unfamiliarity
with the considerable cost of
funeral services to add
unnecessary charges to the bill.
In one common scam of this type,
funeral directors will insist
that a casket, usually one of
the most expensive parts of
funeral services, is necessary
even when performing a direct
cremation, which can be
accomplished with a cardboard
casket rather than an expensive
display or burial casket.
4. Fraudulent
Anti-Aging Products
In a society
bombarded with images of the
young and beautiful, it’s not
surprising that some older
people feel the need to conceal
their age in order to
participate more fully in social
circles and the workplace. After
all, 60 is the new 40, right?
It is in this
spirit that many older Americans
seek out new treatments and
medications to maintain a
youthful appearance, putting
them at risk of scammers.
Whether it’s fake
Botox like the one in Arizona
that netted its distributors
(who were convicted and jailed
in 2006) $1.5 million in barely
a year, or completely bogus
homeopathic remedies that do
absolutely nothing, there is
money in the anti-aging
business.
Botox scams are
particularly unsettling, as
renegade labs creating versions
of the real thing may still be
working with the root
ingredient, botulism neurotoxin,
which is one of the most toxic
substances known to science. A
bad batch can have health
consequences far beyond wrinkles
or drooping neck muscles.
5. Telemarketing
Perhaps the most
common scheme is when scammers
use fake telemarketing calls to
prey on older people, who as a
group make twice as many
purchases over the phone than
the national average.
While the image
of the lonely senior citizen
with nobody to talk to may have
something to do with this, it is
far more likely that older
people are more familiar with
shopping over the phone, and
therefore might not be fully
aware of the risk.
With no
face-to-face interaction, and no
paper trail, these scams are
incredibly hard to trace. Also,
once a successful deal has been
made, the buyer’s name is then
shared with similar schemers
looking for easy targets,
sometimes defrauding the same
person repeatedly.
Examples of
telemarketing fraud include:
“The Pigeon Drop”
The con artist tells the
individual that he/she has found
a large sum of money and is
willing to split it if the
person will make a “good faith”
payment by withdrawing funds
from his/her bank account.
Often, a second con artist is
involved, posing as a lawyer,
banker, or some other
trustworthy stranger.
“The Fake Accident Ploy”
The con artist gets the victim
to wire or send money on the
pretext that the person’s child
or another relative is in the
hospital and needs the money.
“Charity Scams”
Money is solicited for fake
charities. This often occurs
after natural disasters.
6. Internet Fraud
While using the Internet is a
great skill at any age, the
slower speed of adoption among
some older people makes them
easier targets for automated
Internet scams that are
ubiquitous on the web and email
programs.
Pop-up browser windows
simulating virus-scanning
software will fool victims into
either downloading a fake
anti-virus program (at a
substantial cost) or an actual
virus that will open up whatever
information is on the user’s
computer to scammers.
Their unfamiliarity with the
less visible aspects of browsing
the web (firewalls and built-in
virus protection, for example)
make seniors especially
susceptible to such traps.
One example includes:
Email/Phishing Scams
A senior receives email messages
that appear to be from a
legitimate company or
institution, asking them to
“update” or “verify” their
personal information. A senior
receives emails that appear to
be from the IRS about a tax
refund.
7. Investment
Schemes
Because many seniors find
themselves planning for
retirement and managing their
savings once they finish
working, a number of investment
schemes have been targeted at
seniors looking to safeguard
their cash for their later
years.
From pyramid schemes like Bernie
Madoff’s (which counted a number
of senior citizens among its
victims) to fables of a Nigerian
prince looking for a partner to
claim inheritance money to
complex financial products that
many economists don’t even
understand, investment schemes
have long been a successful way
to take advantage of older
people.
8. Homeowner/Reverse Mortgage
Scams
Scammers like to take advantage
of the fact that many people
above a certain age own their
homes, a valuable asset that
increases the potential dollar
value of a certain scam.
A particularly elaborate
property tax scam in San Diego
saw fraudsters sending
personalized letters to
different properties apparently
on behalf of the County
Assessor’s Office. The letter,
made to look official but
displaying only public
information, would identify the
property’s assessed value and
offer the homeowner, for a fee
of course, to arrange for a
reassessment of the property’s
value and therefore the tax
burden associated with it.
Closely related, the reverse
mortgage scam has mushroomed in
recent years. With legitimate
reverse mortgages increasing in
frequency more than 1,300%
between 1999 and 2008, scammers
are taking advantage of this new
popularity.
As opposed to official
refinancing schemes, however,
unsecured reverse mortgages can
lead property owners to lose
their homes when the
perpetrators offer money or a
free house somewhere else in
exchange for the title to the
property.
9. Sweepstakes &
Lottery Scams
This simple scam is one that
many are familiar with, and it
capitalizes on the notion that
“there’s no such thing as a free
lunch.”
Here, scammers inform their mark
that they have won a lottery or
sweepstakes of some kind and
need to make some sort of
payment to unlock the supposed
prize. Often, seniors will be
sent a check that they can
deposit in their bank account,
knowing that while it shows up
in their account immediately, it
will take a few days before the
(fake) check is rejected.
During that time, the criminals
will quickly collect money for
supposed fees or taxes on the
prize, which they pocket while
the victim has the “prize money”
removed from his or her account
as soon as the check bounces.
10. The
Grandparent Scam
The Grandparent Scam is so
simple and so devious because it
uses one of older adults’ most
reliable assets, their hearts.
Scammers will place a call to an
older person and when the mark
picks up, they will say
something along the lines of:
“Hi Grandma, do you know who
this is?” When the unsuspecting
grandparent guesses the name of
the grandchild the scammer most
sounds like, the scammer has
established a fake identity
without having done a lick of
background research.
Once “in,” the fake grandchild
will usually ask for money to
solve some unexpected financial
problem (overdue rent, payment
for car repairs, etc.), to be
paid via Western Union or
MoneyGram, which don’t always
require identification to
collect.
At the same time, the scam
artist will beg the grandparent
“please don’t tell my parents,
they would kill me.”
While the sums from such a scam
are likely to be in the
hundreds, the very fact that no
research is needed makes this a
scam that can be perpetrated
over and over at very little
cost to the scammer.
Don’t let fraud happen to you or
your loved one. Learn about the
most common fraud targeted at
seniors and protect yourself
today! |