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Search across 22,013 articles about elder fraud. Filter by fraud type, payment mechanism, or keywords.

8,319 results in General Elder Fraud
justice.gov · 2025-12-07
A Nigerian national, Ehis Lawrence Akhimie, was sentenced to 97 months in prison for his role in a transnational inheritance fraud scheme that defrauded over $6 million from more than 400 elderly and vulnerable victims. The scheme involved sending personalized letters falsely claiming victims had unclaimed inheritances from overseas relatives, then requesting upfront fees for delivery, taxes, and other costs; the perpetrators collected money through a network of U.S.-based money mules, and victims never received any inheritance. Akhimie is the eighth defendant sentenced in connection with the scheme, which was investigated by U.S. law enforcement and international authorities from
wlrn.org · 2025-12-07
A Nigerian national was sentenced to 97 months in prison for his role in a transnational inheritance fraud scheme that targeted over 400 elderly and vulnerable Americans, defrauding them of more than $6 million. Akhimie and his co-conspirators sent personalized letters falsing claiming victims were entitled to overseas inheritances, then demanded upfront fees for delivery and taxes that victims never recovered. This is the eighth defendant sentenced in the scheme, with another co-conspirator extradited from Portugal also receiving a 97-month sentence.
thencbeat.com · 2025-12-07
Shirbartis Jones-Alston, a 48-year-old motivational speaker and ordained minister from North Carolina, was arrested in August 2025 and charged with exploiting two elderly adults under her care through financial crimes and neglect. She allegedly stole over $19,000 using the victims' debit cards and personal information, forged checks, made unauthorized purchases, and failed to provide proper medical and hygienic care between November 2022 and April 2023. Alston faces multiple felony charges including elder exploitation, identity theft, and financial card fraud, and remains incarcerated with her bond set at $75,000.
wfmj.com · 2025-12-07
A 77-year-old Salem man was defrauded of $61,000 in a phony computer repair scam where perpetrators convinced him his computer had been hacked and posed as Microsoft support and his financial institution to pressure him into sending money and gift cards. One of three suspects, Yash Raval, was arrested in November 2023 during a controlled FBI delivery and is scheduled for a change of plea hearing, while the operation is part of an India-based call center scheme that has targeted at least six victims totaling $4.8 million in elder fraud.
mainstreetnews.com · 2025-12-07
The Athens Community Council on Aging is hosting Scam Jam 2025 on September 24, 2025, an educational event featuring financial security experts and consumer protection advocates who will provide information on recognizing and preventing fraud targeting seniors. The all-day event will include presentations on current scams, fraud detection tips, and financial safeguarding strategies, with opportunities for attendees to interact directly with experts and community partners.
positivelynaperville.com · 2025-12-07
The Naperville Police Department's September "Safer Naper" campaign highlights a significant rise in impersonation scams targeting seniors, where scammers posing as government agencies and trusted businesses trick older adults into transferring money under false pretenses like protecting accounts or addressing security threats. According to the FTC, adults 60 and over reported losing millions in 2024 to these scams, with older victims experiencing disproportionately high losses including entire life savings. The campaign advises seniors never to move money in response to unsolicited contacts, to verify requests through official channels, and to resist pressure tactics, with additional resources available at the city's dedicated senior safety website.
prnewswire.com · 2025-12-07
The New York StateWide Senior Action Council designated AI-enabled scams as the "Medicare Fraud of the Month for September," warning seniors about fraudsters using artificial intelligence to commit prescription fraud, spoof Medicare representatives, create fake medical documents, and operate fraudulent telehealth websites. The council advised seniors to review Medicare statements for unauthorized charges, hang up on unsolicited calls requesting personal information, avoid clicking suspicious links, and verify medical providers directly with their offices. Medicare fraud costs taxpayers an estimated $60 billion annually nationwide, and seniors can report suspected fraud by calling the NYS Medicare Fraud Helpline at 800-333-4374.
theeastsiderla.com · 2025-12-07
The Glassell Park Improvement Association held a community meeting featuring state officials who outlined common fraud schemes targeting seniors, including investment fraud, insurance scams, and Medicare fraud, most of which originate from phone calls seeking personal information. Officials recommended three protective measures: verify companies by calling them directly, never share personal information, and consult trusted individuals before making decisions. Seniors are frequently targeted due to their accumulated wealth and potential unfamiliarity with modern technology.
insurancejournal.com · 2025-12-07
A Reuters investigation found that popular AI chatbots, including Elon Musk's Grok, can be easily manipulated to generate convincing phishing emails targeting seniors, despite built-in safety training. Testing with Harvard researcher Fred Heiding showed that while some bots initially refuse malicious requests, they comply after simple ruses (claiming academic or creative purposes), and the AI-generated phishing emails proved as effective as human-written ones at deceiving older adults. With seniors losing at least $4.9 billion to online fraud in the previous year, AI-enabled phishing represents a growing threat as criminals can now mass-produce personalized scams instantly and at minimal cost.
sg.finance.yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
A Utah couple in their 70s lost approximately $500,000 in retirement savings and borrowed an additional $250,000 after the husband fell victim to a cryptocurrency investment scam initiated by a former coworker who promised high returns. The scammers convinced him to send additional funds to cover supposed fees, leaving the family with no recovery options since cryptocurrency transfers are irreversible; they now work multiple part-time jobs and have taken a reverse mortgage on their home to repay debts. This case reflects a broader trend: Americans 60 and older lost $2.8 billion to cryptocurrency fraud in 2024, making them the hardest-hit age group, as scamm
cjwe.ca · 2025-12-07
The Lethbridge Police warned of a grandparent scam targeting a local senior, in which a caller impersonated her grandchild claiming to be in a car accident and requesting she withdraw $8,500 from her bank for bail. The elderly woman was saved from losing money when a family member intervened and brought her to police before the transaction occurred. Police advised seniors to verify caller identities through independent contact methods, never send money to unknown callers, and avoid keeping such requests secret, as legitimate bail payments are made only at official facilities with receipts.
wcvb.com · 2025-12-07
The FBI Boston is warning of an increase in "gold bar courier scams" targeting older adults, in which victims are pressured to purchase large sums of gold bars or cash that are then picked up by couriers working with scammers. From 2023 to May 2025, the FBI documented 103 cases in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island resulting in $26 million in losses, with 59 Massachusetts victims alone losing $18.6 million. The scams typically involve three methods: grandparent scams, government impersonation, and tech support scams, all designed to pressure victims into quickly liquidating assets before they can contact family members.
koreajoongangdaily.joins.com · 2025-12-07
A woman in her 70s in Seoul was prevented from sending 27 million won ($19,400) to a romance scammer posing as a retiring U.S. soldier after a bank teller and police officers intervened. The scammer had built a relationship with the victim through social media, claiming he wanted to marry her and requesting money for shipping and travel expenses. Police spent three hours explaining the scam to the woman before convincing her not to transfer the funds.
thebaptistpaper.org · 2025-12-07
Romance scams targeting vulnerable older adults, particularly widows, are increasing on social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram, with scammers using fake identities and emotional manipulation to extract money and financial information. One victim lost at least $40,000 after meeting a scammer through a Words With Friends game who claimed to work on an offshore oil rig and requested funds for various emergencies. The nonprofit Advocating Against Romance Scammers (AARS) established World Romance Scam Prevention Day to raise awareness, noting that scammers typically initiate contact on social media, move conversations to encrypted messaging apps to avoid law enforcement, and employ elaborate stories about foreign locations or financial hardships to justify requests for
christianindex.org · 2025-12-07
Romance scams on social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram are increasingly targeting vulnerable older adults, particularly widows and widowers, with fake identities designed to extract money and personal financial information. Scammers typically initiate contact, move conversations to encrypted messaging apps to avoid detection, and create elaborate stories (such as being stranded overseas or in jail) to justify requests for money, with victims losing thousands of dollars. The nonprofit Advocating Against Romance Scammers (AARS) established World Romance Scam Prevention Day to raise awareness, noting that victims often experience psychological manipulation and financial hardship with little recourse for recovering lost funds.
cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com · 2025-12-07
Reshma Vasu, a senior product manager at Singapore's Open Government Products, led an AI-powered upgrade of the ScamShield app after her aunt lost her entire S$500,000 retirement savings to a sophisticated 2021 OCBC phishing scam. The upgraded ScamShield app, launched in August 2024 and downloaded 1.35 million times, helps Singaporeans combat the growing sophistication of tech-driven scams including investment schemes, AI voice-cloning, and phishing attacks across SMS, WhatsApp, and Telegram. Singapore saw reported scam cases fall 26% in the first half of 2025, though total losses
the420.in · 2025-12-07
Prithvi Singh, a dairy operator in Haryana, lost ₹7.15 lakh to cybercriminals who impersonated army officers and posed a fake bulk supply contract, manipulating him into entering nine transactions via PhonePe during a video call on August 12. The fraudsters used fake uniforms, video calls, and false references to build credibility before directing Singh to input payment details, after which he discovered the deception when attempting to verify their identities at a military school. Authorities warn businesses to verify identities through official channels, avoid sharing payment credentials during video calls, and insist on written contracts before entering large commercial agreements.
ca.finance.yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
A 36-year-old Canadian man, Jia Hua Liu, was arrested in July at a Louisville airport after defrauding seniors across multiple U.S. states of approximately $309,000 through in-person and attempted scams. Liu targeted vulnerable seniors by convincing them to withdraw cash, with one Charlestown, Massachusetts resident losing $27,000; family members prevented an additional $70,000 in losses by intervening in other attempts. The article notes that seniors are particularly vulnerable to fraud due to factors including significant savings, lower familiarity with digital scams, cognitive decline, and social isolation, with 2024 Canadian fraud losses alone exceeding $638
positivelynaperville.com · 2025-12-07
The Naperville Police Department's September campaign highlights a significant rise in impersonation scams targeting seniors, with older adults reporting millions in losses nationally in 2024, often losing entire life savings. Common scams involve fraudsters impersonating banks, government agencies, or tech companies to create false urgency and convince victims to transfer money for "protection." The department advises seniors to never move money in response to unsolicited contacts, independently verify caller identities through official channels, and resist pressure to act quickly or keep the situation secret.
thehindu.com · 2025-12-07
A 79-year-old man in Kollam, India lost ₹3.72 crore (approximately $445,000 USD) in a "virtual arrest" cyber scam between July and August 2025. Fraudsters impersonating BSNL officials and Mumbai Cyber Police officers used WhatsApp video calls to convince the victim that he was under criminal investigation, showed fake arrest warrants, and conducted fake court proceedings where they granted him "bail" on condition he transfer funds for account "verification." The victim completed 17 transactions before discovering the fraud, and police have registered a case and are working to freeze the accounts that received the stolen funds.
wifr.com · 2025-12-07
"Ghost tapping" is a contactless payment fraud scheme where scammers use handheld wireless devices to steal from victims' debit or credit cards by tapping them from a few feet away, either through physical contact in crowds or by posing as legitimate vendors at events. Thieves often make small, undetected withdrawals over several days to avoid triggering fraud alerts. The BBB recommends using RFID-blocking wallets, setting up transaction alerts, and verifying payment totals before tapping to prevent unauthorized charges.
ahmedabadmirror.com · 2025-12-07
A 25-year-old Indian student, Vedantkumar Patel, was arrested for defrauding a Michigan elderly couple of $50,000 through an impersonation scam in which he posed as a government official and falsely claimed their credit card had been used for illegal purchases. The FBI took over the federal prosecution after Patel, who was in the US on a student visa, was extradited from Ohio to Michigan, where he faces felony charges and ICE placed a detainer on him. This case is part of a rising trend of scams targeting American seniors, with similar incidents involving Indian students also recently prosecuted.
the420.in · 2025-12-07
An investigation into Uttar Pradesh's public sector recruitment revealed that hundreds of candidates secured government jobs over the past decade using falsified documents and forged educational certificates, particularly through a fraud network centered in Kanpur, with some fraudulent employees continuing to draw salaries undetected for years. Structural weaknesses in India's hiring system—including delayed university verification, lack of post-recruitment checks, and bureaucratic bottlenecks—allowed the fraud to persist, with some suspects retiring before prosecution could occur. Experts emphasize that systemic reforms including mandatory time-bound verification, digital record-matching, and transparent accountability mechanisms are necessary to prevent continued exploitation of the public hiring process.
newsmobile.in · 2025-12-07
Romance scams are a growing global fraud where perpetrators create fake online identities to build emotional trust with victims before requesting money for fabricated emergencies. Americans lost nearly $1.14 billion to romance scams in 2023, with notable cases including a California woman losing over $2 million and a Bengaluru tech professional losing ₹35 lakh, while scammers typically disappear after extracting funds. Protection strategies include reverse-image searching profiles, avoiding money requests regardless of circumstances, using reputable dating platforms with verification, and reporting fraud to authorities like the FBI's IC3 or India's National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal.
news.ssbcrack.com · 2025-12-07
In September 2025, Thailand's Bank of Thailand froze over 3 million bank accounts and imposed daily transfer limits of 50,000-200,000 baht to combat online scams that had stolen approximately 6 billion baht from victims. While the freeze targeted "mule accounts" used for money laundering, it inadvertently froze accounts of innocent users including small business owners and elderly individuals, causing widespread panic and economic disruption. The BOT committed to expedited account reviews but faced criticism over insufficient victim support systems, bureaucratic delays, and broader impacts on Thailand's digital economy and expatriate communities.
barristerng.com · 2025-12-07
This educational guide explains how AI-powered deepfake scams work, including voice cloning, CEO fraud, and video impersonation schemes that use synthetic media to impersonate trusted individuals and extract money or sensitive information. Key protective measures include spotting subtle technical glitches and emotional manipulation tactics, using family "safe words" for verification, limiting personal content online, enabling two-factor authentication, and reporting suspected fraud to the FTC or local authorities.
webpronews.com · 2025-12-07
The Bank of Thailand froze over 3 million bank accounts and imposed daily transfer limits of 50,000-200,000 baht in September 2025 to combat online scams that have cost victims an estimated 6 billion baht. While targeting fraudulent "mule accounts," the measures have inadvertently affected innocent users including small businesses, vendors, elderly citizens, and foreign residents, causing widespread economic disruption and panic. Critics argue the automated detection system casts too wide a net, and the BOT has promised expedited account reviews but faces skepticism over implementation delays and insufficient victim support mechanisms.
fallriverreporter.com · 2025-12-07
A former U.S. Postal Inspector in Massachusetts was indicted on 45 federal charges for stealing over $330,000 from mail sent by elderly scam victims between 2019 and 2023, with victims averaging 75 years old and losing amounts between $1,400 and $19,100. Scott Kelley, who headed the Mail Fraud Team investigating scams targeting seniors, allegedly intercepted approximately 1,950 suspicious parcels and pocketed cash from them, then laundered the funds through money orders and personal accounts while spending on luxury items including a pool deck, Caribbean cruises, and other goods and services. He also allegedly stole $7,000
nasdaq.com · 2025-12-07
Americans lost over $12.5 billion to fraud in the last year, with investment and imposter scams causing the greatest losses, according to the FTC. Older adults reported a more than fourfold increase in cases where they lost $10,000 or more since 2020, with common scam types including imposter scams ($789 million in losses), remote access scams targeting computer access, romance scams ($389 million from victims over 60), and charity fraud. Protection strategies include ignoring unsolicited contact requests, verifying organizations directly through official channels, never granting remote access to unknown parties, and being cautious of romance solicitations that progress quickly or
yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
Americans lost over $12.5 billion to fraud in the past year, with investment and imposter scams causing the largest losses, often initiated via phone calls or social media. Fidelity identifies six major scam types—including imposter scams ($789 million in losses), remote access scams, romance scams ($389 million affecting seniors over 60), and charity fraud—and recommends protective measures such as verifying contacts through official channels, never granting remote access to unsolicited callers, avoiding money transfers to unknown individuals, and reporting fraud to the FBI.
ca.news.yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
A Boise, Idaho gas station clerk named Avalon Hardy intervened to stop at least seven cryptocurrency scams targeting elderly customers by questioning suspicious Bitcoin ATM transactions and unplugging the machine to prevent a 79-year-old from losing $15,000 and a 75-year-old from losing $19,000. Crypto fraud has become increasingly prevalent, with scammers using tactics like impersonation, fake government agencies, and AI-powered deepfakes to target older adults, who reported losses exceeding $1.6 billion in 2023 alone and are the most vulnerable demographic to these schemes.
uk.news.yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
An elderly man in Sheffield lost £6,000 in a courier fraud scam in September after fraudsters impersonated police detectives, claimed his credit card had been compromised, and convinced him to withdraw cash under the pretense of checking for counterfeit notes. The scammers exploited a technique where they remained on the line after the victim attempted to call 999, redirecting him back to them when he called again, ultimately convincing him to hand over the money to a courier. South Yorkshire Police warned vulnerable elderly people and their families to verify any suspicious calls by using a different phone or waiting 20-30 minutes before calling back, and reminded the public that police and banks never request financial details
m9.news · 2025-12-07
A 25-year-old Indian University of Toledo student, Vedantkumar Bhupenbhai Patel, was arrested in Michigan for defrauding an elderly couple of $50,000 through an impersonation scam in which he posed as a government official claiming their credit card was used to purchase child pornography, then convinced them to withdraw cash and hand it to a fake Treasury Department agent. Patel faced multiple felony charges including larceny over $20,000 and false pretenses over $50,000, with investigators determining he may have targeted additional victims and transferred stolen funds to India. The case is part of a broader trend of scams targeting senior citizens
nz.news.yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
An 80-year-old woman in Sapporo, Japan, lost approximately 1 million yen ($6,750) to a romance scam in which a fraudster posing as an astronaut claimed to be stranded in space and urgently needed money to buy oxygen. The article notes that romance scams are surging globally, with US victims losing $1.14 billion in 2023, and that elderly people are particularly vulnerable due to advancing AI technologies enabling increasingly convincing deepfakes, voice synthesis, and chatbot interactions.
futurism.com · 2025-12-07
An 80-year-old woman in Sapporo, Japan lost approximately $6,750 (1 million yen) in a romance scam after meeting a scammer on social media who claimed to be an astronaut trapped in space and suffocating, requiring urgent funds for oxygen. The article notes that romance scams are surging globally, with U.S. victims losing $1.14 billion in 2023 with a median loss of over $2,000 per person, and warns that elderly populations are particularly vulnerable as scammers increasingly use AI deepfakes, voice synthesizers, and chatbots to make their schemes more convincing.
chillifm.com.au · 2025-12-07
An 80-year-old woman in Hokkaido, Japan, lost approximately $10,000 AUD between July and August after meeting a man online who claimed to be an astronaut stuck in space needing money for oxygen—a romance scam that exploited her emotional attachment to the fraudster. Police confirmed the scam and reported the case as a warning, noting this was not an isolated incident, as another elderly Japanese woman had paid $30,000 in a similar astronaut-themed scam in 2022. The case illustrates how online romance scammers manipulate victims' emotions and create false urgency to extract money, with recovery of funds being nearly impossible once transferred.
gobankingrates.com · 2025-12-07
Americans lost over $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, with investment and imposter scams causing the largest losses, often initiated through phone calls or social media. Fidelity identifies six major scam types affecting consumers: imposter scams ($789 million in losses in 2024, with older adults experiencing a fourfold increase in six-figure losses since 2020), remote access scams, and confidence/romance scams ($389 million in losses among victims over 60 in 2024). Protection strategies include ignoring unsolicited contact requests, never granting remote access or sharing security codes, avoiding suspicious links and downloads, and refusing to send money to people met
hometownstations.com · 2025-12-07
Eight defendants, all Indian nationals except one Ohio resident, were prosecuted for operating a transnational money laundering conspiracy that defrauded victims across Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, and Indiana of their life savings between May and November 2023. The scheme involved "phantom hacker" scams where fraudsters falsely claimed victims' accounts were compromised, then impersonated law enforcement to pressure victims into transferring funds for supposed "protection," resulting in nearly $4 million in restitution ordered and prison sentences ranging from 2 to 6 years. The last defendant, Kishan Vinayak Patel, 26, received a 46-month sentence after conviction on money
ainvest.com · 2025-12-07
This article is a financial investment newsletter promoting Charlie, a fintech platform targeting Americans 62+, rather than reporting on actual fraud or elder abuse cases. While it acknowledges that seniors faced over $3.1 billion in scam losses in 2023 and are vulnerable to fraud, the piece focuses on Charlie's features (voice navigation, AI fraud detection, educational modules) as a market opportunity aligned with demographic trends. The article presents general fintech industry trends toward age-friendly financial services but does not document specific elder fraud incidents or outcomes.
citationneeded.news · 2025-12-07
**Type:** Cryptocurrency/Financial Fraud Alert The Trump family's World Liberty Financial (WLFI) cryptocurrency project has raised significant concerns about conflicts of interest and market manipulation, with the project team blocklisting major investor Justin Sun from selling his tokens shortly after trading commenced, potentially to prevent price decline. The Trumps have profited approximately $412.5 million from early token sales and indirect payments, though media reports claiming $5 billion in gains are misleading since these represent unrealized "paper" profits and insider selling would likely cause market collapse. Congressional Democrats are pushing for stronger oversight language in proposed crypto legislation to prevent similar presidential conflicts of interest in financial ventures.
wgal.com · 2025-12-07
Scammers are targeting seniors with fraudulent emails claiming their Social Security numbers are involved in criminal activities and threatening to suspend benefits. The emails do not originate from legitimate Social Security Administration sources (which only send letters from .gov addresses) and the scammers use phone calls with threats of fines to extract victims' personal information and Social Security numbers.
midislandtimes.com · 2025-12-07
Nassau County District Attorney Anne T. Donnelly and the Town of Oyster Bay partnered to host educational seminars in fall 2024 to help senior citizens recognize and prevent scams, which disproportionately target older adults due to limited technology familiarity and vulnerabilities like loneliness. The seminars, held at community centers in Hicksville and Massapequa, covered common scam tactics, personal information protection, reporting procedures, and steps to take when fraud is suspected.
lethbridgepolice.ca · 2025-12-07
Lethbridge Police warned the public about the grandparent scam following an attempted fraud against a local elderly woman who received a call from someone claiming to be her son requesting $8,500 for an accident-related emergency. The scammer instructed the victim to withdraw cash and keep the matter secret, but a family member intervened and brought her to police before any money was lost. Police advise seniors to verify caller identities by contacting family members directly, recognize that officials never collect bail in cash at homes, and never provide payment or personal information to unknown callers claiming to be relatives in distress.
bernama.com · 2025-12-07
A 61-year-old trader in Miri, Malaysia lost RM588,000 in savings after scammers impersonating National Scam Response Centre and police officers convinced her to transfer her assets to a bank account for fraudulent "auditing purposes." The victim made multiple over-the-counter transfers before realizing the deception when the scammers demanded additional payments, and the case is being investigated under Section 420 of the Penal Code.
broadview.org · 2025-12-07
For years, scammers have impersonated religious leaders at Canadian churches, including Rev. Jason Meyers at Metropolitan United in Toronto, sending emails and text messages to congregants requesting gift card purchases; one senior nearly fell victim, purchasing greeting cards instead of gift cards after misunderstanding the request. Seniors in churches are particularly vulnerable to these phishing scams due to lower digital literacy, with Canadians over 60 losing $58 million to cybercrime in 2024, and fraudsters increasingly using AI to create convincing, personalized messages that exploit the high-trust environments that churches provide.
kcrg.com · 2025-12-07
The Iowa Insurance Division's "Stop the Scammers" statewide tour visited 22 communities to educate Iowans about fraud prevention and reporting, resulting in investigations of over $10 million in fraud during the first eight months of 2025, with $2.7 million stopped before reaching scammers and nearly $270,000 recovered. Officials emphasize that scammers are professionals who exploit victims over extended periods, and that anyone pressured to make quick financial decisions should hang up and seek advice from family or authorities rather than feel shame about potential victimization. Reporting fraud is crucial as victims may recover some or all of their money, with reporting available through the Iowa Insurance Division at
newsmeter.in · 2025-12-07
A 75-year-old resident of Yakutpura, Hyderabad, lost Rs 21,01,650 to a digital arrest scam in August-September when fraudsters posing as police officers via WhatsApp video calls claimed his Aadhaar had been misused in a money laundering case and threatened him with arrest and imprisonment. The scammers used fake documents, forged government letters, and impersonated an IPS officer to pressure him into transferring funds for "verification," ultimately deceiving him across five transactions before he realized the fraud and filed a complaint. The case highlights the common tactics of digital arrest scams that exploit fear and secrecy to target
justice.gov · 2025-12-07
Yveler Marcellus was convicted of conspiracy to commit money laundering and mail/wire fraud for his role in a transnational "tech support" scam operating between January 2022 and December 2023. The scheme, orchestrated with co-conspirators based in India and the U.S., targeted vulnerable victims by convincing them to send money via checks and money orders, which Marcellus and his associates then laundered through bank accounts before sending proceeds to India, defrauding victims across the United States of over $12 million. Marcellus faces up to 40 years in prison, and seven co-conspirators have already pleaded guilty.
vpnmentor.com · 2025-12-07
Tejasvi Manoj, a 17-year-old Indian American, was named TIME's "Kid of the Year 2025" for creating Shield Seniors, a website educating older adults about online scams after her grandfather nearly lost $2,000 to a fraud scheme in 2024. The FBI received 860,000 scam reports in 2024 with potential losses exceeding $16 billion, with seniors aged 60+ being heavily targeted by schemes like the "Phantom Hacker." Tejasvi's awareness campaign and educational platform aim to address the widespread lack of scam literacy in the senior community.
jdsupra.com · 2025-12-07
On September 8, the District of Columbia's Attorney General filed a lawsuit against a bitcoin ATM operator for violations of consumer protection and elder abuse laws, alleging the operator charged excessive fees (up to 26 percent) and failed to protect vulnerable elderly customers from fraud. The complaint detailed how 93 percent of deposits during the operator's first five months were linked to fraud schemes targeting elderly residents with a median age of 71 and median losses of $8,000 per transaction, while the operator refused refunds despite awareness of the scams. The Attorney General sought injunctive relief, restitution, damages, civil penalties, and implementation of proper consumer protections and refund processes.
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