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in General Elder Fraud
mondaq.com
· 2025-12-08
On August 4, 2025, FinCEN issued a warning about escalating criminal misuse of convertible virtual currency (CVC) kiosks, noting that over two-thirds of kiosk-related fraud losses in 2024 affected seniors who were targeted through tech support and government impersonation scams directing them to transfer funds via the kiosks. The notice also identified widespread operator noncompliance with Bank Secrecy Act requirements and documented use of CVC kiosks by drug cartels for money laundering through structuring transactions below reporting thresholds and using multiple machines across jurisdictions.
ainvest.com
· 2025-12-08
This educational piece examines the financial vulnerabilities facing aging populations, noting that 7.2 million Americans aged 65+ currently live with Alzheimer's dementia (projected to triple by 2060), with dementia-related costs reaching $384 billion annually and expected to surge to $1.6 trillion by 2050. Financial literacy among U.S. seniors aged 55+ has declined to 49.2%, increasing susceptibility to fraud—global elder fraud losses exceed $36 billion annually—while cognitive decline leads to poor financial decisions regarding Social Security, Medicare, and long-term care planning. The article highlights emerging solutions including AI-driven fintech platforms that reduce
algona.com
· 2025-12-08
Iowa seniors face a significant threat from scam calls, with 85% of landline calls now classified as spam or unwanted, targeting the approximately 500,000 seniors in the state who rely on landlines. According to the FBI's 2022 Elder Fraud Report, 557 seniors over 60 in Iowa lost an average of $500 or more to scams, totaling over $12 million in losses statewide. The author calls for state and local authorities to develop comprehensive educational programs and anti-fraud resources to protect vulnerable seniors from increasingly sophisticated schemes.
ainvest.com
· 2025-12-08
**Article:** AInvest Newsletter - Elder Fraud and Financial Literacy Crisis
U.S. seniors aged 55+ lost $3.4 billion to scams in 2023 as financial literacy declined to 49.2% and cognitive impairment rates spiked, with 62.3% of older adults in federally qualified health centers exhibiting undiagnosed mild cognitive impairment. Global elder fraud losses exceed $36 billion annually, creating systemic risks to retirement security and healthcare systems, while simultaneously spurring a $10 trillion longevity market focused on AI-driven financial platforms, annuities, and cognitive intervention tools to mitigate
pacbiztimes.com
· 2025-12-08
Caihong Lei, 34, was charged by Santa Barbara County prosecutors with multiple felonies including conspiracy to commit theft from an elder, attempted theft from an elder, and attempted theft by false pretenses, along with several misdemeanors including elder abuse and petty theft. Lei was held at Santa Barbara County jail on $500,000 bail as of August 7, 2025, though specific details about the victim, the scheme tactics, or amounts involved were not disclosed in the announcement.
bankingjournal.aba.com
· 2025-12-08
From 2020 to 2024, the Federal Trade Commission reported a dramatic surge in impersonation scams targeting retirees, with reports of losses exceeding $10,000 increasing fourfold and losses over $100,000 rising sevenfold. Scammers posed as banks, government agencies, and even the FTC itself, using fake fraud alerts and Social Security warnings to trick victims into transferring funds to Bitcoin ATMs or giving cash to couriers. The FTC advises consumers to never send money in response to unsolicited contacts, to hang up and independently verify alerts, and to use call-blocking options.
nature.com
· 2025-12-08
This research study compared video-based versus text-based anti-fraud educational materials for older adults aged 60 and above, finding that video interventions significantly outperformed text-only materials in improving comprehension, emotional engagement, and fraud prevention intentions. Text-based materials provided more detailed information but generated lower emotional engagement, while the study validated a combined multimodal approach integrating both formats to better address older adults' cognitive and emotional needs in protecting themselves against sophisticated fraud schemes.
idyllwildtowncrier.com
· 2025-12-08
In response to rising scams targeting older adults in California, Assemblymember Greg Wallis and the Desert Recreation District are hosting a free Senior Scam Awareness Seminar at the Palm Desert Community Center on August 13, 2025. Older adults reported approximately $700 million in combined losses nationally in 2024, prompting the event to feature law enforcement and consumer protection experts discussing scam identification, reporting procedures, and protective measures against identity theft, Medicare fraud, and financial exploitation.
lowincomerelief.com
· 2025-12-08
Social Security recipients face escalating financial fraud, with seniors over 60 losing an estimated $3.4 billion to scams in 2023 alone. The article outlines seven common scam types targeting this vulnerable population: fake government calls (including a new SSA warning about fraudsters posing as federal agencies demanding payment via untraceable methods), Medicare fraud, grandparent scams, financial services impersonation, tech support scams, fake assistance programs, and romance scams. The article provides protective measures for each scam type, emphasizing verification of contacts, use of official phone numbers, and avoidance of unusual payment methods and unsolicited requests for personal information.
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
The Southwest Ohio Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, in partnership with the Kettering Police Department and Lathrem Senior Center, will host a free educational seminar on August 28, 2025, designed to help seniors recognize, report, and avoid consumer scams. The seminar will cover current scam trends and protection strategies, with in-person attendance at the Lathrem Senior Center and a virtual Zoom option available for remote participants.
rfdtv.com
· 2025-12-08
Social Security impersonation scams are increasing as criminals pose as SSA officials via calls, texts, emails, and social media to steal Social Security numbers, with scammers now using AI to create more convincing and personalized communications including fake credentials and spoofed official letterhead. Experts warn that recipients may be particularly vulnerable during periods of system changes, such as 2024's new login requirements for My Social Security accounts, and advise people to be suspicious of unsolicited contact offering to help with credential changes since the SSA rarely initiates contact with the public.
americanbanker.com
· 2025-12-08
The Federal Trade Commission reported a dramatic surge in imposter scams targeting older adults from 2020 to 2024, with losses over $100,000 increasing nearly sevenfold and reported total losses reaching $700 million in 2023 (though estimated real losses may reach $7.1 billion to $61.5 billion when unreported cases are included). Scammers use deceptive tactics like impersonating banks, government agencies, and tech companies to create urgency and convince victims to send money via cryptocurrency (33%), bank transfers (20%), or cash (16%), with bank transfers most common for losses exceeding $100,000. Banks face pressure to enhance fraud prevention
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
A Pew Research Center survey found that approximately 73% of U.S. adults have experienced at least one online scam or attack, with credit card fraud, online shopping scams, and ransomware being the most common. Cybersecurity experts warn of evolving threats including phishing attacks via unsolicited calendar invites, multi-factor authentication scams, and malicious HTML attachments, and recommend protective measures such as adjusting calendar settings, verifying suspicious invites through trusted contacts, and remaining vigilant against social engineering tactics.
thecyberexpress.com
· 2025-12-08
Three Ghanaian nationals were extradited to the United States in August 2025 and charged with operating a fraud ring that stole over $100 million from victims between 2016 and 2023 through romance scams targeting vulnerable and elderly Americans and business email compromise attacks against U.S. companies. The defendants allegedly built fake romantic relationships to manipulate victims into sending money and hacked business emails to trick companies into wire transfers, then laundered the proceeds through intermediaries to West Africa. Each defendant faces charges including wire fraud, money laundering, and receipt of stolen money, with potential sentences up to 75 years in prison if convicted on all counts; a fourth co-conspirator
jfs.ohio.gov
· 2025-12-08
Ohio state agencies warn of rising cryptocurrency scams targeting older adults, where scammers contact victims via phone, text, or email claiming they must pay fines or correct banking errors using Bitcoin or gift cards. The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services and Department of Aging urge residents and families to remain vigilant against these virtual currency fraud schemes.
americascreditunions.org
· 2025-12-08
FinCEN issued guidance alerting financial institutions to a rising trend of scam payments involving cryptocurrency ATMs (CVC kiosks), where scammers contact victims—particularly elderly individuals—via unsolicited calls impersonating banks, government agencies, or tech support to direct them to deposit cash into crypto ATMs. According to FTC data, older adults account for more than two-thirds of all losses from CVC kiosk scams, with criminals often instructing victims to structure transactions across multiple deposits or kiosks to evade reporting thresholds. The advisory identifies red flags for credit unions and CVC operators to detect suspicious activity, including unusual high-value withdrawals, elderly members with no
westernmassnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Thirteen individuals were charged for operating a transnational elder fraud scheme from a call center in the Dominican Republic that defrauded over 400 U.S. seniors of more than $5 million. The scammers used scripts to convince elderly victims that relatives needed emergency financial assistance, sometimes targeting victims multiple times, and enlisted rideshare drivers to transport victims to banks for additional withdrawals before laundering the money back to the Dominican Republic. Nine suspects were arrested while four remain at large.
stlpr.org
· 2025-12-08
A 31-year-old St. Louis-area man, Chaman Silverio Balbuena, has been indicted as part of a 13-person grandparent scam operation that defrauded over 400 elderly victims of more than $5 million. Balbuena, along with co-conspirators in the Dominican Republic, used fake emergency calls claiming grandchildren needed legal fees for accident-related lawsuits, then employed him as a "runner" to collect cash via rideshare drivers—netting at least $350,000 from 25 victims between November 2022 and February 2023. He faces charges for conspiracy to commit mail and wire frau
boston25news.com
· 2025-12-08
A transnational elder fraud ring operating a call center in Santiago, Dominican Republic, defrauded over 400 elderly victims (average age 84) out of more than $5 million through "grandparent scams," with at least 50 victims in Massachusetts. Thirteen individuals have been charged in connection with the scheme, which involved callers posing as grandchildren in distress and then as attorneys requesting emergency funds; four suspects remain at large while nine are in custody. Federal authorities shut down the operation following a two-year investigation and are urging victims to come forward without shame, noting that such schemes are increasingly sophisticated, sometimes aided by AI.
boston.com
· 2025-12-08
A transnational elder fraud ring based in the Dominican Republic was disrupted after a two-year investigation resulting in nine arrests and four additional charges, with 13 suspects identified in total. The scheme defrauded over 400 victims (average age 84) of more than $5 million across Massachusetts, Florida, California, Maryland, and New York by using bilingual callers posing as distressed grandchildren in accidents or legal trouble, followed by a "closer" impersonating an attorney, then a "runner" collecting cash via rideshare services. Alleged ringleader Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia and associates face charges including conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and money laundering,
troopers.ny.gov
· 2025-12-08
On July 31, 2025, State Police in Clifton Park and U.S. Homeland Security Investigations arrested Chuncheng Lin, 26, and Hui Lin, 40, for grand larceny and conspiracy related to a computer scam targeting an elderly Saratoga County resident. The victim lost over $80,000 in cash and gift cards after being contacted via computer and phone by someone falsely claiming to be from Citizens Bank Fraud Department who threatened legal prosecution and demanded payment. The suspects were apprehended during a supervised meeting when they attempted to collect an additional $30,000, and both were released on appearance tickets pending court dates in August 2025.
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
Thirteen individuals, led by Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia, were charged for operating a transnational "grandparent scam" call center in the Dominican Republic that defrauded over 400 elderly victims (average age 84) across the United States, resulting in more than $5 million in losses, including at least 50 victims in Massachusetts. The scheme involved callers posing as grandchildren in distress or their attorneys, instructing victims to send cash via rideshare drivers or mail, and often requesting additional payments through fabricated stories. The defendants allegedly laundered the illicit proceeds back to the Dominican Republic through money launderers and bank accounts in the United States.
gvnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes held an Elder Scams Town Hall in Nogales, informing nearly 100 seniors about the rising threat of elder fraud, noting that Arizona had 246 elder fraud cases per 100,000 seniors in 2022—the highest in the United States. Mayes highlighted various scam tactics targeting seniors, including romance scams, phishing emails, telemarketing, gift card scams, and cryptocurrency fraud, emphasizing that scammers exploit emotional manipulation and increasingly use AI technology to mimic loved ones' voices. She advised attendees not to answer unknown calls, never share personal information over the phone, create "safe words" with loved ones
wtoc.com
· 2025-12-08
Beaufort County officials and scam experts held a community awareness event to address the rising rate of elder fraud targeting adults over 60, noting that one in ten seniors will experience some form of elder abuse. Common scams discussed include romance scams (often perpetrated by international actors), jury duty payment schemes, gift card scams, and sophisticated fraud involving fake verification of items for sale. Experts recommend preventing these scams by questioning unsolicited communications, avoiding high-pressure tactics, not sharing personal information unexpectedly, and contacting law enforcement or the National Elder Fraud Hotline (1-833-372-8311) to report suspected fraud.
bostonglobe.com
· 2025-12-08
Federal authorities charged 13 people operating a call center in the Dominican Republic with defrauding over 400 U.S. seniors (average age 84) of more than $5 million between May 2022 and April 2024 through a "grandparent scam" in which callers posed as grandchildren in legal or medical distress and accomplices impersonating lawyers extracted additional payments. The sophisticated scheme involved commercial telemarketing software, dark web victim lists, and ride-hail drivers to collect cash, and was dismantled after a two-year FBI investigation initiated when Uber alerted authorities to suspicious activity. Nine of the 13 defendants are in custody,
bostonherald.com
· 2025-12-08
Federal authorities dismantled a transnational "grandparent scam" operation based in the Dominican Republic that defrauded over 400 victims nationwide, including at least 50 in Massachusetts with an average age of 84, stealing more than $5 million. The scheme involved call center employees posing as grandchildren in distress or their attorneys, instructing elderly victims to send cash via rideshare drivers or mail, with some victims targeted multiple times for additional funds. Thirteen individuals were charged, with eleven arrested on Tuesday, after a two-year joint investigation by the FBI and Dominican Republic authorities, and the stolen proceeds were laundered back to the Caribbean.
nbcnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Thirteen Dominican Republic citizens have been charged with operating a sophisticated grandparent scam that defrauded approximately 400 U.S. seniors out of $5 million by posing as their grandchildren in distress and repeatedly extracting money from victims. The victims, averaging 84 years old and located across Massachusetts, California, New York, Florida, and Maryland, were targeted with calls claiming emergencies such as car accidents or arrests, with fraudsters sometimes contacting the same victims multiple times. Nine suspects are in custody while four remain at-large, each facing conspiracy charges for mail fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering with potential sentences up to 20 years in prison.
wcvb.com
· 2025-12-08
Thirteen people were charged in a sophisticated transnational elder fraud ring that operated from call centers in the Dominican Republic and defrauded over 400 Massachusetts senior citizens of approximately $5 million in combined losses. The defendants used a coordinated system of "openers" posing as distressed grandchildren, "closers" impersonating lawyers, and "runners" collecting cash, often making repeated calls to victims to extract additional payments for fabricated emergencies. Alleged mastermind Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia and other defendants used rideshare drivers as unwitting money couriers, with nine suspects arrested, two remaining at large in the U.S., and two at large in the Dominican Republic.
paymentsjournal.com
· 2025-12-08
The FTC has documented a more than four-fold increase in older adults losing $10,000 or more to impersonation scams over the past four years, with combined losses for seniors losing over $100,000 rising eight-fold from $55 million to $445 million. These scams typically involve criminals posing as representatives from known organizations, government officials, or tech companies to manipulate victims into financial transfers, and they are increasingly sophisticated—using tactics like spoofed emails and phone calls that exploit seniors' tendency to trust callers and respond to urgency and threats. Cybercriminals tailor their approaches by medium (phone calls for seniors, social media for younger users) an
wwnytv.com
· 2025-12-08
Federal investigators charged 13 people operating from Dominican Republic call centers in a grandparents scam that defrauded approximately 400 elderly victims (average age 84) of over $5 million. The scammers impersonated grandchildren requesting emergency funds, then used Uber drivers to transport cash from victims' homes to middlemen and eventually to the Dominican Republic, with ringleader Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia allegedly using stolen money to fund a lavish lifestyle including purchasing a boat. Uber flagged the scheme to the FBI and subsequently implemented driver training changes to prevent similar fraud.
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Federal prosecutors charged more than a dozen individuals in "grandparent scams" where con artists impersonated grandchildren to solicit emergency money from elderly victims. The scheme defrauded hundreds of grandparents out of over $5 million.
nbcboston.com
· 2025-12-08
Federal authorities dismantled a transnational elder fraud ring based in the Dominican Republic, charging 13 individuals led by Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia with defrauding over 400 elderly Americans of more than $5 million. The sophisticated scheme employed "openers" who posed as grandchildren in emergencies, "closers" who impersonated lawyers demanding fees, and "runners" in the U.S. who collected cash from victims' homes, with money laundered back to the Dominican Republic. Many victims experienced repeated calls threatening escalating emergencies and suffered emotional trauma, with some too ashamed to report the fraud to their families.
ca.news.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Thirteen individuals were charged with operating grandparent scam call centers based in the Dominican Republic that defrauded approximately 400 older adults (average age 84) of over $5 million across the United States by posing as family members in legal trouble needing bail money. Nine of the defendants are in custody, including ringleader Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia, while four remain at large; the perpetrators used dark web data to target victims, employed scripted calls, and laundered proceeds toward luxury purchases and home upgrades.
home.treasury.gov
· 2025-12-08
The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned four Mexican individuals and 13 companies linked to CJNG's timeshare fraud operation in Puerto Vallarta, which has been targeting elderly American timeshare owners since approximately 2012. CJNG, a designated terrorist organization, uses call centers staffed with English-speaking telemarketers to perpetrate complex scams that can last years and result in victims losing their life savings, while generating significant alternative revenue for the cartel's violent operations. Treasury officials warned current and prospective timeshare owners in Mexico to be cautious of unsolicited offers and conduct due diligence before engaging in purchases.
kcur.org
· 2025-12-08
A 31-year-old St. Louis-area man, Chaman Silverio Balbuena, was indicted as part of a "grandparent scam" network that defrauded over 400 elderly victims of more than $5 million between November 2022 and February 2023. Balbuena and 12 others orchestrated the scheme by having callers in the Dominican Republic impersonate grandchildren claiming to need emergency bail money, then used rideshare drivers to collect at least $350,000 from at least 25 victims. Balbuena faces federal charges of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and money laundering, an
live5news.com
· 2025-12-08
Charleston Police are investigating five scam cases targeting elderly residents (ages 61-85) who were manipulated into transferring $7,000-$10,000 each via phone calls, with three victims directed to Bitcoin ATMs while scammers remained on the line. The scammers used high-pressure tactics such as claiming relatives were in jail, threatening arrest warrants, or alleging identity theft, and requested payment through gift cards or cryptocurrency. Police advise victims to hang up immediately, avoid sharing personal or financial information, and verify suspicious claims by calling trusted family members or local law enforcement.
quiverquant.com
· 2025-12-08
Senator Rick Scott held a U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging field hearing addressing fraud against seniors, highlighting that seniors lost over $4.8 billion to scams in 2024, with $2.5 billion from those aged 50-59. Scott discussed new fraud prevention legislation including the "STOP Scammers Act" and "GUARD Act," emphasizing the need for greater awareness and preventive measures against increasingly sophisticated schemes, particularly those utilizing artificial intelligence.
wgal.com
· 2025-12-08
An elderly couple from Franklin County lost thousands of dollars in a grandparents scam, part of a larger FBI investigation that resulted in the arrest of 13 individuals accused of stealing over $5 million from more than 400 senior citizens using a call center based in the Dominican Republic. The sophisticated fraud ring employed runners in the United States to pick up cash from victims' homes after convincing them via phone calls that a grandchild needed emergency money. Authorities recommend that seniors establish a family code word to verify the identity of callers claiming to be grandchildren in distress.
kesq.com
· 2025-12-08
Coachella Valley residents are experiencing rising scam cases through phone calls, texts, and emails, prompting officials to launch awareness initiatives including a Senior Scam Awareness Seminar hosted by Assemblymember Greg Wallis and the Desert Recreation District. Fraud officials are advising older adults not to engage with scammers and directing victims to report incidents to the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, local law enforcement, the Federal Trade Commission, or the FBI depending on the type of fraud.
wamc.org
· 2025-12-08
A transnational grandparent scam operating from the Dominican Republic was dismantled following a two-year investigation, with suspects from New York, Massachusetts, and the Dominican Republic charged after defrauding at least 400 elderly victims of over $5 million. The sophisticated operation used call centers with "openers" posing as grandchildren in emergencies and "closers" impersonating lawyers demanding cash, with unwitting rideshare drivers recruited to transport victims to banks and deliver money; the scheme was uncovered when Uber flagged suspicious rides and alerted federal authorities. At least nine suspects were arrested facing wire fraud, mail fraud, and money laundering charges carrying up to 20
mcknightsseniorliving.com
· 2025-12-08
Impersonation scams targeting older adults have surged dramatically, with the FTC reporting a four-fold increase in reports of losses exceeding $10,000 and an eight-fold increase in losses over $100,000 (from $55 million in 2020 to $445 million in 2024), totaling nearly $5 billion in fraud losses in 2024. Common scam tactics include fake security alerts impersonating banks, government agencies, and tech companies like Microsoft and Apple, as well as fraudsters posing as FTC officials directing victims to Bitcoin ATMs or cash couriers. Arizona, Indiana, and Nevada reported the highest fraud complaint rates among
nbcpalmsprings.com
· 2025-12-08
A senior scam awareness seminar was held in Palm Desert to educate older adults about fraud prevention amid increasing fraud losses in the community. The event, featuring speaker Greg Wallace, covered topics including Medicare fraud, identity theft prevention, and general elder fraud awareness. The seminar aimed to help seniors in the Coachella Valley recognize and avoid common scams targeting their age group.
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
In 2024, fraud against Americans over 60 resulted in $4.8 billion in reported losses nationally, with Florida alone accounting for nearly $400 million stolen from seniors aged 60 and older, prompting a U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging field hearing in Miami-Dade County. AARP Florida testified that criminals increasingly use sophisticated transnational networks, stolen data, AI, and cryptocurrency to exploit seniors, citing cases like a man in his sixties who lost over $400,000 to cybercriminals and faced homelessness. The hearing highlighted proposed legislation including the STOP Scammers Act and GUARD Act aimed at freezing scam networks
bobsullivan.net
· 2025-12-08
Crypto ATMs (convertible virtual currency kiosks) have become a major tool for defrauding elderly Americans, with people aged 60+ being three times more likely than younger adults to lose money through these machines. In 2024, the FBI received over 10,956 complaints involving crypto ATMs with approximately $246.7 million in reported losses (a 99% increase in complaints from 2023), with criminals using various scams including tech support fraud, government impersonation, romance scams, and emergency scams to manipulate victims into depositing cash into these machines. The author argues that stronger regulation is needed, including lower daily transaction limits and removal of machines facilitating frau
nanaimonewsnow.com
· 2025-12-08
A Qualicum Beach senior lost over $50,000 in a cryptocurrency scam after responding to a Facebook ad in April and being lured by fake investment gains that appeared to quadruple her initial investment on a fraudulent startup platform. The scam was reported to Oceanside RCMP in mid-July as part of a pair of fraud cases affecting local seniors in the area.
redhotcyber.com
· 2025-12-08
Four Ghanaian nationals were indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice for operating an international fraud ring called the "Sakawa Boys" that stole over $100 million between 2016 and May 2023 through romance scams targeting elderly individuals and Business Email Compromise (BEC) attacks on corporations. The defendants, extradited to the U.S. in August 2025, held leadership positions in the hierarchical organization and used fake identities to gain victims' trust online, then laundered proceeds through fictitious bank accounts and international transfers. Each faces charges including wire fraud (up to 20 years per count), money laundering conspiracy (up to 20
womansworld.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers posing as grandchildren are targeting elderly individuals by claiming emergencies (car accidents, arrests, etc.) and requesting urgent money transfers; thirteen Dominican Republic nationals were recently charged with defrauding approximately 400 U.S. grandparents of nearly $5 million across Massachusetts, California, New York, Florida, and Maryland. To protect themselves, grandparents should verify callers' identities through personal questions or video calls, avoid sharing financial information over the phone, and refrain from sending money immediately even if the caller claims to be a distressed family member.
seattlemedium.com
· 2025-12-08
This educational article explains why intelligent people are vulnerable to modern scams despite their cognitive abilities. Key risk factors include social isolation, financial struggles, overconfidence in security, and lack of awareness of current schemes, while scammers exploit cognitive biases (confirmation bias, optimism bias, authority bias, scarcity principle), emotional manipulation (fear, urgency, threats), and social pressure to manipulate victims into participating in fraud schemes. The article emphasizes that anyone can be scammed regardless of intelligence level, and understanding these psychological tactics is essential for avoiding fraud.
gantnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Pennsylvania State Police issued a warning about increased scams, con artist schemes, and home invasions targeting residents, particularly the elderly. Common tactics include home improvement fraud (offering low-quality services like diluted driveway sealant at below-market prices), paired home invasions where one person distracts the homeowner while the other searches for valuables (often posing as utility workers), and phone scams that lead to identity theft. Police recommend verifying identification and employment, checking contractor references, and being skeptical of deals that seem too good to be true.
libn.com
· 2025-12-08
A 78-year-old retired art teacher in Port Jefferson Station lost $15,000 to fraud after receiving a convincing fake Apple Pay notification followed by calls instructing her to withdraw cash for "safekeeping." This case exemplifies a broader wave of sophisticated scams targeting seniors across Long Island and the country, with Suffolk County alone reporting over $126 million in elder fraud losses in 2023, using tactics like AI-generated voices and fake emails that exploit family and financial networks. Elder law attorneys recommend prevention strategies including verifying identities through independent sources, using strong passwords with two-factor authentication, monitoring accounts regularly, and avoiding suspicious emails and links—emphasizing that fraud prevention is both a personal security