Houston Chronicle

Law targets scams that prey on elderly

Swindlers glean info from social media to make con convincing

- By Max B. Baker

FORT WORTH — A woman is shocked when she gets an email from her grandson pleading for help.

He’s in New York City, where he crashed a rental car. He needs her to wire several thousand dollars to a bank account in the Caribbean. His parents don’t know he’s in New York, so please don’t tell them.

The woman goes to the bank to get the money. But little does she know that she’s being scammed by someone pretending to be her grandson. And once the money is gone from her bank account, it is hard to get it back.

“The scammers do this all day long. They are able to pull enough informatio­n off of Facebook to build a story and they know just enough to convince an elderly person that it’s true,” said Celeste Embrey, assistant general counsel at the Texas Bankers Associatio­n. “The elderly are very ripe and rich targets for scammers.”

But a new state law gives Texas banks and financial institutio­ns more flexibilit­y to protect the elderly and disabled from exploitati­on by allowing them to stop what they believe to be questionab­le transactio­ns and report the potential fraud to the authoritie­s for investigat­ion.

$3 billion lost annually The law went into effect Sept. 1. “More of this goes on than we’d like to admit,” said state Sen. Kelly Hancock, who co-sponsored the measure with state Rep. Tan Parker. Hancock said this is a vulnerable part of our society, “many of whom have worked their whole lives to get to this point and they can be destroyed overnight.”

While no one can say precisely how much money is lost in such transactio­ns, the U.S. Justice Department estimates that about $3 billion is lost annually in elderly financial fraud schemes.

The legislatio­n is part of a movement across the country to protect the growing elderly population. In 2017, the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office created a fraud unit to specialize in prosecutin­g crimes against the elderly and the disabled. It also helped to create the Financial Exploitati­on Prevention Center of Tarrant County to help those who have been victimized.

“These are greedy people with very little conscience,” Hancock said.

Banks, credit unions and other financial institutio­ns previously had the ability to stop transactio­ns if there was questionab­le activity, but often it required freezing an entire account. They also didn’t have the authority to notify a third party about an outof-the ordinary check or withdrawal of cash.

The new law allows a financial institutio­n to place up to a 10-day hold on a specific request for payments, similar to what credit card companies do after questionab­le purchases are reported. Blocks on such payments can be extended for up to 30 days if requested by a state or federal agency or law enforcemen­t. Those requests to extend financial holds would be reviewed by a court.

Giving tellers options

It also gives an individual employee, like a teller, immunity from being sued if a customer is unhappy about not having immediate access to his or her money.

But, if the request for funds is legitimate, the hold shouldn’t cause the parties involved to “throw a fit,” said Tim Morstad, assistant state director for AARP Texas.

“The tellers are the last backstop,” Morstad said. “Once the money leaves a bank account, you can’t get it back. We want the bank teller to have some options. This is one more tool in their toolbox.”

If a transactio­n involves someone with an ongoing personal relationsh­ip with the elderly victim — a family member, a caretaker or a neighbor who routinely provides help — then Adult Protective Services, a division of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, would conduct the investigat­ion.

If the transactio­n in question involves a stranger taking advantage of a senior citizen, such as scam artist promising to fix a driveway or a roof, it would be turned over to law enforcemen­t.

Slightly more than 63,000 exploitati­on allegation­s were made to Adult Protective Services from 2012 to 2016 with about 4,800 being validated, according to state records. That is only the “tip of the iceberg,” since it is believed that a vast majority of financial abuse goes unreported, said Kez Wold, associate commission­er for the department.

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