Dayton Daily News

Technology has made online ‘sweetheart scams’ easier than ever

- By Holly Zachariah

In the past year, Union County Deputy Sheriff Rich Crabtree has noticed an uptick in the number of people who have been conned in a romance scam. But what worries him even more than the increase is the use of one particular method by scammers: obituaries.

“People often say in obituaries that the couple was married, you know, 30 years, 40 years, 50 years and so you know the survivor’s going to be lost,” said Crabtree, a crime-prevention deputy. “These scammers prey on loneliness and tell you what you want and need to hear.”

What’s commonly known as “sweetheart scams” are far from new. You’ve heard about them before, or maybe you someone you know has been a victim.

Often, you meet someone online. They travel a lot, maybe say they’re in the military, in constructi­on, often something that takes them out of the country. And before long, they need money.

You likely send a small amount at first, and then the situations get more dire, the requests bigger. Before you know it, your savings is gone. And so if the person you thought was the love of your life.

Technology — phone apps such as the encrypted WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger — has only made the scams easier.

The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center logged 791,790 complaints in 2020 about all types of internet crimes — ranging in everything from identity theft to gambling schemes — representi­ng losses of $4.2 billion. The number of complaints was a 69% increase over 2019 and a 165% increase from five years ago.

The sweetheart scam numbers — also known as “confidence fraud” — registered 23,741 complaints in 2020.

Attorney General Dave Yost’s office recorded 39 sweetheart-scam complaints last year, ranging from a woman who authorized a $400 transactio­n on her debit card to a man who gave away $119,000 in cash.

Large sums of money are at stake in the fraudulent dating business. Just earlier this month, a Columbus man pleaded guilty in federal court to his role in a scam that conned $6 million from those looking for love.

But experts say officially reported numbers are alarmingly deceiving for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that most scams never get reported because people are embarrasse­d by what happened to them, said Tim McGuinness, who founded a nonprofit organizati­on called Society of Citizens Against Relationsh­ip Scams (SCARS).

SCARS operates in the arena of crime prevention but also is devoted to helping victims of these scams reclaim their lives, he said.

“We have to help the world understand that the world online is not safe,” said McGuiness. “People don’t do enough in-depth research to really understand the psychology behind how this works. You cannot intellectu­alize your way out of danger. Once the manipulati­on has taken hold, even if you see the red flags you will ignore them.”

What does that mean? McGuinness said we have to analyze our own behaviors to understand why we do what we do and, perhaps most importantl­y, reverse the internet culture that convinces us to judge our worth and popularity by how many online “friends” we have.

Debby Montgomery Johnson, who works alongside McGuinness at SCARS and personally mentors women who have been scammed by love, said that’s where the prevention part becomes important — by helping people realize what they’re looking for and why they’re so desperate to get it.

The 61-year-old from Florida knows firsthand. After her husband died in 2010, the llonely widow soon met a man online. Two years later, she’d given a little more than $1 million to her beloved “Eric,” a world-traveling contractor who said he lived in London, when she discovered he was really a man in Nigeria.

Her situation was rare, however, because the scam ended when the man, whom she had met on a Christian dating site, actually revealed himself to her over a video.

So what can be done about it?

Crabtree said that paying attention to those who may be most vulnerable — the elderly, the isolated, those who have suffered a recent loss — goes along way.

“Family has to stay involved,” he said. “Because people do things they would never, ever do if they weren’t lonely.”

 ??  ?? Debby Johnson was scammed $1 million.
Debby Johnson was scammed $1 million.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States