Herald on Sunday

Disturbing scam ‘Love rats’ scour obituaries for elderly victims

‘Fifty-something’ scammers are scanning obituaries looking for widows to target

- John Weekes

Middle-aged love rats preying on elderly women have alarmed private investigat­ors. The younger men seduce senior citizens and some sift through obituaries to find freshly-widowed women, Julia Hartley Moore said.

“What I’m really getting, which is kind of disturbing, is women in their 80s and men in their 50s,” she told the Herald on Sunday. “The men in their 50s are just scamming these women out of everything.”

Hartley Moore said the love rats tried to drive a wedge between the elderly women and their families.

“The guys try to alienate them, and pretty much succeed.”

Loneliness was a major reason older women fell for the younger Lotharios, she said.

Some scammers scoured death notices, then might find the target’s address and make an approach.

This first contact might involve visiting the elderly target’s home and offering to perform services around the house.

This method resembled a tactic some of the infamous Unruly Tourists

used two years ago.

Two brothers from that group approached an Auckland man of 79, offering to clean his roof. They later insisted more work was needed, eventually taking almost $20,000.

Today’s love rat scammers usually targeted women in wealthy neighbourh­oods, Hartley Moore said.

She said concerned relatives would approach private investigat­ors. “All of a sudden . . . their mother’s withdrawn. She doesn’t seem to need them to take her out.”

Sometimes concerned family members had their motives questioned, with insinuatio­ns about inheritanc­e money.

But Hartley Moore said her clients would tell her: “My aunt can leave it to the SPCA, the Cancer Foundation, but I don’t want my aunt to give it to this guy.”

Sometimes the male con artists were even older. “I met a client who met the guy at a car wash. They like the same things. She ended up giving him $900,000. And she was one of many,” Hartley Moore added.

“This guy was in his 70s and she was in her 60s but usually it’s an older woman and a man about 20 years her junior.”

The silver fox scammers led double lives, and Hartley Moore said many of them had sexual affairs with the older women. “The guys are married, with families, and they’re taking home the spoils of their work to their own family.”

She said a scammer’s wife might believe her husband was altruistic­ally helping the elderly woman.

Hartley Moore said the charlatans sometimes devised glamorous or exotic-sounding back stories.

“He made out that he’s Italian and he tells the old lady that he lives in Christchur­ch,” she said of one scammer.

He was actually an East European man living on Auckland’s North Shore, using the target’s money to fund his gambling habit.

“We used to get a lot of them,” a former New Zealand Police fraud squad detective said. “Members of the family try to stop the elderly relative.”

Many of these romance scams targeting the elderly were carried out purely online, frequently from overseas.

Phil Jones from Omega Investigat­ions said elderly people would be especially vulnerable if no relatives were looking out for them.

“We’d only get a complaint if the family member recognised it and came to us.”

Fraud expert and author Bronwyn Groot of QRisk said she’d had clients concerned about men targeting elderly female relatives.

“I don’t think it’s so much naivete. Anyone is susceptibl­e to this type of scam. All you have to be is vulnerable,” Groot said. “If they’re not targeting you online, they’re targeting you on your doorstep.”

She knew of a gardener who befriended an elderly woman and soon persuaded her to buy him cars and motorcycle­s.

Sometimes scam victims refused to go to police, because they still believed their exploiter was a nice person.

“Like any abusive relationsh­ip, they will start isolating the older person, isolating the victim, maybe going into the bank with the victim.”

She said the United States had strengthen­ed legal protection­s against elder abuse, establishi­ng Elder Justice Co-ordinators nationwide. Lawmakers here could consider tougher penalties, or contemplat­e whether a victim’s age should be deemed an aggravatin­g factor in fraud offences, Groot said.

If you suspect elder abuse, call 0800 32 668 65 (0800 EA NOT OK) for advice or text 5032 or email support@elderabuse.nz

If you’re concerned for someone’s immediate safety, call 111.

 ??  ?? Julia Hartley Moore
Julia Hartley Moore

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