Journal Pioneer

Picking the pockets of seniors

Strangers and family target elderly

- BY JAMES RISDON SALTWIRE NETWORK

It started off innocently enough, with a few friendly messages on Facebook from another senior who certainly seemed like the real deal. “I had a street address ( for him) and the whole bit,” said Heather Marchione. The then-72-year-old divorcee started exchanging text messages with her newfound friend on the social media platform and got to learn several things about him. Like her, he was apparently of Italian heritage. Allegedly a 60-year-old engineer living in Arizona, he said he traveled extensivel­y to other countries for business and had a grown daughter. Quickly, their social media exchanges turned into almost daily phone calls. “It was fun having someone calling you every night and asking, ‘How was your day?’” said Marchione. The budding friendship lasted for about a month. During that time, he provided Marchione with a telephone number for his supposed daughter and encouraged them to speak over the phone. Marchione did call her. A woman’s voice answered and they had a conversati­on. And then, it came. The ask. This is the goal of every scam artist seeking to defraud seniors of their savings, a crime that’s almost impossible to solve and is part of what is believed to be widespread and largely under-reported financial abuse of seniors. Although some of this financial abuse is perpetrate­d by organized crime syndicates, a lot of it is also done by family and friends of seniors. That makes it even more difficult for police forces to catch the culprits. “We’re only hitting the tip of the iceberg and it’s going to get worse (as Atlantic Canada’s population continues to age),” said Const. Tom Wood, crime prevention officer for the Amherst Police Department. “It’s a very under-reported crime... the senior population does not want to come forward because they are embarrasse­d and they have a strong sense of loyalty (to their families).” In Marchione’s case, the ask came when the scam artist was ostensibly in a foreign country to work on a bridge developmen­t. “His scam was the daughter,” she said. “Apparently, she had a brain tumor. He had her in a private school… but she had to go tothe hospital and was in the emergency and needed US$5,000… He gave me detailed instructio­ns to wire the money.” Marchione now admits that by then she believed all of this was real. Sure, there had been a few red flags, like his claim that he didn’t use credit cards even when traveling and staying in hotels that usually require a credit card to reserve rooms. But she had been speaking with him almost daily for about a month. “He should have gotten an Academy Award,” she said. “He was darned good.” Marchione’s saving grace was that she didn’t know exactly how to wire money from her bank account. She called the customer service line to get more informatio­n and told the person at the other end of the line what she was being asked to do. The bank saved her from making a big mistake. She didn’t send the money. When she called her supposed friend, the scam artist, he got very upset, used foul language, and that, well, was the end of that. Marchione hasn’t heard from him since. But even though she didn’t fall victim to this scam artist, Marchione admits she hasn’t gone to the police or shared her story until now because – like many other people who are victims of these scams – she feels “stupid” for having been fooled. She is only coming forward now to share her story to ensure other seniors will realize it’s not their fault and they have to speak up to put an end to this financial abuse. Surveys conducted by CARP, a national organizati­on for seniors formerly known as the Canadian Associatio­n of Retired Persons, of its roughly 350,000 members show that 34 per cent of them have either been either abused themselves or know of another senior who has been abused. Annual CARP survey results released from 2011 through to 2015 show that between 39 per cent and 50 per cent of that abuse of seniors is financial. Canada’s police forces, though, only ever find out about a tiny fraction of it. “Only 10 per cent is reported. That’s what we’ve been saying over the years,” said Bill VanGorder, a national director of CARP and spokesman for its Nova Scotia chapter. According to VanGorder, there are three main kinds of scams currently targeting seniors. These include investment fraud, where a senior is encouraged to put money into a phony investment vehicle. A second popular scam involves a call to a senior citizen, reporting alleged irregulari­ties at their bank and soliciting their help in what is supposed to be an attempt to catch the culprits. Under this scam, the senior is asked by the con artists posing as police or bank security officials to go to an automated teller machine and withdraw a sum of money. The fake security officials then ask for the money under the guise that it will be used to take down the fraudsters at the bank under investigat­ion. And there’s the catfish scam. That’s the kind of scam used by the con artists who tried to victimize Marchione. Under this scam, the con artist, the catfish, creates a fictitious online identity to start up a fake relationsh­ip. These can be romantic relationsh­ips or just friendship­s. The ultimate goal of creating that relationsh­ip is to exploit it to bilk the victim, often of thousands of dollars. Const. Wood says another popular scam is to play on the grandparen­ts’ love for their grandchild­ren. Under this con, the scam artist calls the senior, pretending to be one of the grandchild­ren, maybe faking a cold to explain the change in the sound of his or her voice. The scammer will concoct some sort of emergency that requires the wiring of money, perhaps bail money for a false arrest or a medical emergency. “You wouldn’t think it would work but grandparen­ts will do anything for their grandchild­ren and they wire them the money,” said the police officer. But those who financiall­y abuse seniors are often a lot closer to home. In many cases, it is family and friends who dip into the senior’s bank account or take their credit cards. “Caregivers or family members gain access to the senior’s credit or debit card, usually for legitimate reasons, to buy groceries or something, and then they start dipping into it for their own purposes,” said VanGorder. “It starts off very innocently but once you start doing it, it gets easier and easier.” After deciding to not send the scam artist the US$5,000 he was demanding, 74-year-old Marchione turned around and made her money work for her. “I invested it in the stock market after that … and doubled it," she said. "I got some really good stocks. I’m very proud of that.”

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