Calgary Herald

14 people charged in grandparen­t scam

- FAKIHA BAIG

• Fourteen alleged members of an organized gang are facing dozens of charges after 126 people from across Canada lost nearly $1 million in total in a so-called “grandparen­t scam,” Ontario Provincial Police announced Thursday, saying the fraud caused more than just financial distress.

OPP Deputy Commission­er Marty Kearns said several scam victims _ many of whom were seniors — experience­d severe emotional pain after losing money they had saved over a lifetime.

“This not only affects their future plans, but also puts them into a state of uncertaint­y with increased stress,” he said during a news conference in Toronto.

“Victims who have been defrauded often struggle with shame and humiliatio­n, which can lead to significan­t emotional, psychologi­cal and physical damage.”

The alleged scammers were impersonat­ing judges, lawyers, and police officers on phone calls and leading their victims to believe their loved ones were in distress and urgently needed money for bail or other fees, investigat­ors said. The victims were between 46 and 95 years old, police said.

“They targeted people with landline telephones and, in most instances, they utilized money mules or couriers to collect large amounts of money from the victims,” said OPP Det. Insp. Sean Chatland, adding that victims' personal informatio­n was known to the suspects through publicly available informatio­n on the internet.

Police said the 126 victims they identified were scammed between January and April 8. But investigat­ors said they believe there are hundreds more who've fallen victim in the past to the “grandparen­t scam.”

Chatland said their search for the fraudsters began in September 2022 and turned into a multi-jurisdicti­onal effort between police services in Quebec and Ontario in February 2023 after details emerged that victims lived in places across Canada, but mostly in Ontario.

“It took us a significan­t period of time to really understand this group, to understand how they operated, to even just identify them,” Chatland said.

When investigat­ors got closer to the suspects, they began tracing phone calls to locate them.

Police said between April 10 and this week, officers arrested the 14 people at addresses across the Montreal area and investigat­ors laid 56 charges in total. Four of the suspects remain in custody.

“Charges include involvemen­t in organized crime groups, extortion, impersonat­ing a police officer, and fraud ... we're talking about violence and threats of violence,” the OPP detective said.

Chatland said police have been able to recover about $500,000 in losses after collaborat­ing with financial institutio­ns, but they believe there are hundreds more victims who've lost thousands more because the fraud is under-reported.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Several scam victims, many of whom were seniors, lost money they had saved over a lifetime, the OPP said Thursday.
POSTMEDIA NEWS Several scam victims, many of whom were seniors, lost money they had saved over a lifetime, the OPP said Thursday.

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