Times Colonist

Dirty John-style scams most common fraud in Canada

- — Brett Bundale

One expert calls it a Dirty John scenario: An alleged scam artist who woos victims with romance and charm.

Simon Sherry, a clinical psychologi­st and professor in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscien­ce at Dalhousie University, says such scams are often pulled off by people with “a very dark constellat­ion of traits.”

“These individual­s tend to be narcissist­ic, psychopath­ic, Machiavell­ian, and sadistic,” he says. “Someone possessed by these traits can be very exploitati­ve and parasitic, and that’s usually part of a lifelong pattern where others are used in a callus and unemotiona­l way.”

Sherry says they can be charming, well-groomed and self-assured, and they tend to excel in the early stages of a relationsh­ip.

As for the victims, he says “it’s difficult to withstand the tsunami of charm and persuasion.”

Such scams were highlighte­d in the true-crime series Dirty John, based on a California case. And some Canadian women have come forward to detail how they succumbed to the charms of a more polite, bilingual version of the notorious U.S. scammer.

Romance scams surpass all other types of fraud in Canada, with 760 victims reporting losses of more than $22.5 million to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre last year.

Sgt. Andrew Joyce with the Nova Scotia RCMP Financial Crime Section says the majority of those scams are online, with the victim never even meeting the perpetrato­r.

“This sort of Dirty John scenario where they have a relationsh­ip gets a lot more complicate­d,” he says, noting that they are also less common.

Joyce says proving a crime beyond a reasonable doubt is a challenge in these cases, which is why police may recommend victims pursue a civil case where the threshold is the lower balance of probabilit­ies.

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