▶ VIDEO
CBS Mornings
· 2024-05-15
Scammers on TikTok are advertising popular prescription weight loss drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro at discounted prices without requiring prescriptions, using fake testimonials, before-and-after photos, and positive reviews to lure vulnerable buyers. A joint investigation by the Digital Citizens Alliance and Coalition for a Safe Web examined dozens of these TikTok profiles and found that nearly all of them were fraudulent schemes designed to steal money from consumers seeking affordable weight loss medication.
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▶ VIDEO
Dare County
· 2024-09-09
Ashley Lamb from the Area Agency on Aging presented information about the Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP) program, which has operated since 2003 under North Carolina's Department of Insurance. The program aims to empower seniors aged 60 and older and their caregivers to prevent healthcare fraud, waste, and abuse through education and outreach, utilizing trained SHIP volunteers to provide free counseling and assistance across a 10-county region.
usatoday.com
· 2025-12-08
A pharmacist fell victim to an elaborate impersonation scam when scammers spoofed the Ohio Board of Pharmacy's number, falsely claiming her license was linked to a narcotics investigation and threatening arrest unless she paid a $500,000 bond. Over three months, the scammers manipulated her into moving $500,000 of her savings and retirement funds into a "protected account" and taking out two additional loans totaling $250,000, all of which went directly to the fraudsters. The article notes that scams are rising nationally, with Americans losing over $159 billion in 2023, and that professionals with specialized licenses and higher incomes—such as pharmacists
themountaineer.com
· 2025-12-08
**Summary:**
A free educational program titled "Medicare 101" is being offered on April 25 at the Haywood County Senior Resource Center in Waynesville, hosted by certified counselor John Chicoine. The presentation covers Medicare basics, supplements, Advantage plans, prescription plans, and includes information about Medicare scams to help those approaching Medicare age navigate their options.
healthday.com
· 2025-12-08
A University of Michigan poll of 3,379 adults over 50 conducted in February-March 2024 found that five of the six most pressing health-related concerns for older Americans centered on costs: medical care (56%), assisted living (56%), prescription medicines (54%), health insurance/Medicare (52%), and dental care (45%), with financial scams and fraud (53%) rounding out the top concerns. These worries were consistent across all demographic groups regardless of age, gender, race, ethnicity, region, or income level, highlighting healthcare affordability as a critical issue for millions of seniors and their families.
prnewswire.com
· 2025-12-08
A joint investigation uncovered at least sixty scam operators on TikTok impersonating pharmacies and medical professionals to defraud Americans seeking Ozempic and other weight loss drugs, collecting hundreds of dollars per victim before failing to deliver the products. The scammers exploit TikTok's algorithms, which recommend weight loss drug sellers to users and facilitate connections between bad actors and vulnerable consumers, using payment apps like Zelle and Venmo to make refunds difficult. The investigation also found that nearly half of Americans using these drugs acquired them without prescriptions, highlighting both the prevalence of scams and the broader problem of illegal drug distribution on social media platforms.
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers on TikTok are posing as legitimate pharmacies to sell popular weight loss drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro without prescriptions at lower prices, using fake testimonials and before-and-after photos to lure vulnerable buyers. A joint investigation by Digital Citizens Alliance and Coalition for a Safer Web found dozens of such scam accounts that accepted payments through Zelle, PayPal, and Venmo but never delivered products, exposing victims to fraud, counterfeit drugs, or dangerous unsupervised medication use. Both the drug manufacturers and TikTok have responded by emphasizing that these medications require prescriptions and medical supervision,
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-08
A joint investigation by Digital Citizens Alliance and Coalition for a Safer Web found that scammers are using TikTok to fraudulently sell prescription weight loss drugs at discounted prices, with nearly all examined profiles operating as scams. The investigation identified dozens of fake profiles exploiting consumer demand for affordable weight loss medications through deceptive online sales tactics.
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers on TikTok have been targeting consumers seeking weight loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy by offering discounted prices without prescriptions, with a joint investigation by Digital Citizens Alliance and Coalition for a Safer Web finding that nearly every transaction examined from February through April was fraudulent. The scammers used fake testimonials and before-and-after photos to lure vulnerable buyers, accepting payments through services like Zelle, PayPal, and Venmo but never delivering products. Researchers warned that victims face multiple harms including financial fraud, counterfeit drugs, or dangerous use of real medications without medical supervision.
nasdaq.com
· 2025-12-08
Losses from scams targeting adults age 60 and older reached $3.4 billion last year—an 11% increase from the prior year—with an average loss of $33,915 per victim, according to FBI data. Older adults are frequently targeted through tech support scams, personal data breaches, and romance scams because they often have substantial assets and may be more trusting and less likely to report fraud. Experts recommend protective measures including strong data hygiene practices, using credit cards for online purchases, verifying unsolicited communications directly with trusted sources, establishing account oversight with multiple trusted contacts, and fostering open conversations about scams to reduce shame and encourage reporting.
nerdwallet.com
· 2025-12-08
Older adults are increasingly targeted by financial scams, with losses reaching $3.4 billion in the past year—an 11% increase from the previous year, with an average loss of $33,915 per victim. Scammers target this demographic because they typically have savings and assets, are more trusting, and less likely to report fraud, with tech support scams, personal data breaches, and romance scams being most common. Protective measures include adopting basic data hygiene practices (using secure websites, strong passwords, two-factor authentication), verifying unsolicited contacts directly with known sources, establishing multiple trusted contacts to monitor accounts, and reducing stigma around reporting scams.
ca.sports.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Two Los Angeles retirees, both in their late 70s/early 80s, lost approximately $79,500 and $75,000 respectively to tech support and cryptocurrency scams in early 2024. Neal was duped into allowing remote computer access after a fake software subscription email, while Mrs. K. was tricked by a pop-up virus alert into withdrawing cash and depositing it into bitcoin machines at multiple locations. The article notes that elder fraud is widespread and sophisticated, with the FBI reporting that victims over 60 lost $3.1 billion in 2022, and recommends disconnecting from the internet when encountering suspicious pop-ups and being cautious of uns
kiplinger.com
· 2025-12-08
Older adults, despite 88% using the internet, are increasingly targeted by scammers who exploit fears and lack of technical knowledge to steal identities and money. The author, a 50-year finance professional, fell victim twice to tech support scams that tricked him into providing sensitive information including his Social Security number and credit card details. FBI data shows elder fraud complaints rose 14% recently with victims averaging losses of $33,915, and common scams targeting seniors include fake tech support calls, Medicare/health insurance fraud, internet pop-up viruses, and telemarketing schemes.
detroitnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Older adults lose an estimated $3.4 billion annually to financial scams (averaging $33,915 per victim), with tech support scams, data breaches, and romance scams being most prevalent due to older adults' assets, trusting nature, and lower likelihood of reporting fraud. Experts recommend protecting against scams through basic data hygiene practices (secure websites, strong passwords, two-factor authentication), using credit cards for online purchases, verifying suspicious communications directly with sources, establishing multiple trusted contacts to monitor accounts, and fostering open conversations about fraud to reduce shame and encourage reporting.
businessinsider.com
· 2025-12-08
Phishing scams targeting weight loss drugs like Ozempic increased 183% from January to April, with scammers exploiting the high cost of these medications (approximately $1,000 monthly) by posting fake offers on social media platforms like Facebook and Craigslist. Criminals impersonate doctors and pressure victims to share personal information and use unconventional payment methods such as Bitcoin, Zelle, and Venmo—red flags indicating fraudulent activity. McAfee recommends consumers verify official retailers, avoid suspiciously low prices, check for complete product details, and report scams to relevant financial institutions to attempt fund recovery.
yourdailyjournal.com
· 2025-12-08
The Department of Insurance reports a spike in insurance fraud cases affecting all consumers through increased premiums, with particular targeting of seniors through door-to-door fake insurance sales, deceptive annuity/investment schemes, prescription fraud, and staged accident claims. The department received over 10,000 Medicare fraud complaints in 2023 involving unauthorized billing for medical supplies and duplicate charges, and provides 14 protective tips including verifying agent credentials, obtaining written estimates, protecting personal information, and reviewing explanation of benefits statements.
valleytimes-news.com
· 2025-12-08
Police Chief Denise McCain and representatives from the FBI, Better Business Bureau, and other agencies presented at an East Alabama Regional Planning Commission Summit to educate seniors about fraud targeting older adults. The presentation covered common scams including jury duty imposters, tech support blackmail, grandparent scams using AI-generated voices, lottery scams, and IRS fraud, emphasizing that older adults with good savings and credit are lucrative targets who often delay reporting due to shame or uncertainty about where to report. Key prevention advice included never providing information over the phone, calling loved ones directly to verify requests, and immediately reporting blackmail to police.
aldailynews.com
· 2025-12-08
Alabama's Department of Human Resources warned SNAP recipients of over 100 phone scams in which fraudsters impersonated DHR or EBT Customer Service representatives to steal EBT card numbers and PINs; the department could not quantify total losses but noted most scams go unreported. Additionally, Alabama's Board of Pharmacy alerted pharmacists to a spoofing scam where callers falsely claim to represent the board and demand payment to resolve fabricated license sanctions.
nerdwallet.com
· 2025-12-08
This educational article outlines key strategies for avoiding financial scams, noting that 54% of Americans have experienced scam attempts in the past two years, with 18% losing money (median loss of $325, though 32% lost $1,000 or more). Experts recommend four main protective measures: hanging up and contacting companies directly using verified numbers, enabling multifactor authentication and monitoring accounts weekly, familiarizing yourself with common scam types, and recognizing that anyone—regardless of education or income level—can fall victim to fraud.
houstonchronicle.com
· 2025-12-08
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency is educating consumers about the dangers of counterfeit products, which account for significant seized goods including apparel (26.2%), handbags and wallets ($658 million in retail value), watches and jewelry (15.6%), and footwear (11.6%) in 2023. Purchasing counterfeit items supports criminal organizations, often involves forced labor, is made from poor-quality materials that deteriorate quickly, and violates intellectual property laws, though buying directly from manufacturers and researching third-party sellers can help consumers avoid these fake goods.
vietnamnet.vn
· 2025-12-08
Online fraud remains widespread, with scammers exploiting social media, e-commerce platforms, and OTT applications through five primary tactics: fake money recovery services, counterfeit miracle medications, labor export/visa scams, copyright extortion schemes, and fraudulent e-commerce alerts. Recent cases include a woman in Thanh Hoa losing additional funds to a fake recovery service and 10 victims collectively defrauded of over 747 million VND in overseas work scams. Prevention strategies include verifying service legitimacy through official channels, avoiding sharing personal information with unverified contacts, consulting certified healthcare professionals, and reporting suspected fraud to law enforcement.
fortune.com
· 2025-12-08
A University of Michigan study from February-March 2024 found that health care affordability is the top concern among older American voters, with 56% very worried about medical care costs, 54% concerned about prescription medication costs, and 52% anxious about health insurance and Medicare expenses. Financial scams and fraud ranked as the fifth-highest concern at 53%, with researchers noting that the Government Accountability Office estimates older Americans lose $2.9 billion annually to fraud, which causes significant mental distress that can cascade into other health problems. The study suggests that presidential candidates seeking older voters' support should prioritize communicating plans to control health care costs and address fraud prevention.
mcknightsseniorliving.com
· 2025-12-08
A University of Michigan poll of 2,576 older adults found that the cost of assisted living, nursing home care, and home care is their top health-related concern (56.3% very worried), followed closely by medical care costs, prescription medication costs, and financial scams and fraud (52.8% very worried). Women and liberal/moderate respondents reported significantly higher worry levels than men and conservative respondents across most cost-related healthcare concerns.
nkytribune.com
· 2025-12-08
The Better Business Bureau highlights ten common scams affecting consumers, including auction fraud (wire transfer schemes), fake social media ads using legitimate company logos, employment scams requesting upfront payments or personal information, Facebook Marketplace deals that seem too good to be true, high-pressure debt collection calls, romance scams targeting vulnerable individuals, fraudulent charity donation requests, Amazon account hack phishing attempts, QR code scams leading to malware, and puppy sales scams on Facebook groups. BBB advises consumers to verify companies and charities directly, avoid sharing personal or financial information online or over the phone, use secure payment methods, and research sellers and breeders before conducting transactions.
today.com
· 2025-12-08
I cannot provide a meaningful summary of this content. The material provided appears to be a webpage listing or index of multiple video segments rather than a cohesive article. While the page includes references to fraud-related content (such as "Medical Ad Scams Powered by AI Deepfakes" and "How to save on prescription medications and avoid scams"), the actual article text or substantive details about these topics are not included.
To create an accurate Elderus summary, please provide the full text or transcript of the specific article you'd like summarized.
ktvz.com
· 2025-12-08
This educational article identifies 10 common scams targeting seniors, who lose approximately $3 billion annually to fraud. The scams include romance scams, funeral fraud, grandparent impersonation schemes, phishing emails, Medicare fraud, fake tech support, and others that exploit seniors' trust, limited digital literacy, and valuable assets like homes and savings. The article provides protective advice such as setting social media accounts to private, verifying caller identities through stored contact numbers, and being skeptical of unsolicited requests for money or personal information.
philomathnews.com
· 2025-12-08
Seniors lose approximately $3 billion annually to scams, making them prime targets due to their savings, home ownership, good credit, and often lower digital literacy. The article identifies 10 common scams targeting older adults, including romance scams (fraudsters posing as romantic interests), funeral scams (exploiting grief over deceased spouses), grandparent scams (impersonating grandchildren in emergencies), phishing (fake emails from financial institutions), Medicare fraud, and tech support scams, among others. Prevention strategies include securing social media accounts, verifying contact information through reverse searches, and calling family members directly to confirm emergencies.
wmtw.com
· 2025-12-08
The U.S. Attorney's Office for Maine launched the Maine Rx Elder Fraud Program, distributing informational brochures through prescription bags at Hannaford's 60 in-state pharmacies to educate seniors about common scams and the National Elder Fraud Hotline. The initiative leverages pharmacists' trusted position and regular contact with older customers—approximately nine of ten people over 65 have regular prescriptions—to reach vulnerable populations and reduce fraud incidents in Maine, where residents lost over $7.1 million to fraud last year.
fox23maine.com
· 2025-12-08
A new brochure created by the U.S. Attorney's Office and non-profit partners will be distributed at Maine pharmacies to help prevent elder fraud, following reports that 397 Maine residents aged 60+ lost over $7.1 million to scams in the previous year. The brochure educates seniors about common fraud tactics—including gift card/wire transfer demands, urgency pressure, and fake computer infection pop-ups—and provides victim support resources. Officials note that the reported losses likely represent only a fraction of actual fraud cases, as many incidents go unreported.
goldrushcam.com
· 2025-12-08
On September 21, 2024, the Biden-Harris Administration announced new initiatives to support women's economic security, particularly as they age, acknowledging that women typically retire with less savings than men while living longer and facing greater financial vulnerability. The announcement included over $200 million in grants for senior employment training, nearly $3 million for emergency housing for older women experiencing abuse, and new resources for retirement planning and financial literacy. The administration also emphasized existing protections against financial fraud and scams targeting women, alongside policies to strengthen Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
couriernews.com
· 2025-12-08
The Russellville Police Department warns that elderly individuals are increasingly targeted for financial crimes, with an estimated 37 percent of telemarketing fraud victims being seniors. The article attributes this trend to the growing aging population and seniors' accumulated resources, while advising elders to report crimes, remember that "if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is," and contact local police before committing to suspicious offers.
nbcmontana.com
· 2025-12-08
Missoula Aging Services reported a surge in phone scams where callers impersonate Medicare, government agencies, banks, and tech support to extract victims' personal information including Medicare numbers, Social Security numbers, and bank account details using high-pressure tactics. The organization urges consumers to be suspicious of unsolicited calls requesting personal information and recommends verifying caller identity by independently contacting the organization, then reporting suspicious calls to Montana Senior Medicare Patrol at 1-800-551-3191 or the Federal Trade Commission.
ktvz.com
· 2025-12-08
The Oregon Department of Human Services' Senior Health Insurance Benefits Assistance (SHIBA) program is offering free help during Medicare Open Enrollment (October 29 - December 7, 2025) to assist beneficiaries in comparing and changing plans, understanding new 2025 Medicare benefits like lower drug cost maximums ($2,000) and expanded coverage for weight loss drugs and mental health services, and detecting Medicare scams. SHIBA certified counselors provide assistance via phone (800-722-4134), virtual, and in-person appointments and can help report common scams that target seniors seeking free medical equipment or genetic testing by attempting to obtain Medicare numbers for billing fraud.
riverreporter.com
· 2025-12-08
The New York StateWide Senior Action Council warned seniors about Medicare scams during the open enrollment period ending December 7, advising people to avoid sharing personal information with unsolicited callers claiming to represent Medicare, as the agency never cold-calls and Part D enrollment is voluntary, not mandatory. Seniors who suspect their Medicare or Social Security numbers have been compromised or were enrolled in plans without permission can contact the NYS Senior Medicare Patrol at 800/333-4374.
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
During Medicare's open enrollment period (October 15–December 7), scammers impersonate Medicare representatives to steal personal information and Medicare numbers from beneficiaries through unsolicited calls and high-pressure tactics, sometimes fraudulently claiming extra benefits for early enrollment or offering unnecessary services. AARP Pennsylvania advises beneficiaries to review Medicare statements carefully, reject unsolicited offers, and verify that legitimate contact comes only after they initiate calls to Medicare, with scams reportable to law enforcement or AARP's fraud hotline at 1-877-908-3360.
kiplinger.com
· 2025-12-08
During Medicare's open enrollment period, seniors become vulnerable to scammers who exploit the need for personal information by impersonating Medicare officials, offering fraudulent card replacements, and promoting fake supplemental coverage plans. A 2023 data breach of 900,000+ Medicare beneficiaries' information from contractor Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation highlighted the risks, though Medicare has since implemented protective measures like the Medicare Beneficiary Identifier to replace Social Security numbers on cards. To protect themselves, seniors should shield government ID numbers, access Medicare.gov directly rather than through suspicious links, and be wary of unsolicited calls or visits claiming to represent Medicare.
abc.net.au
· 2025-12-08
Scammers created deepfake videos impersonating Australian diabetes expert Professor Jonathan Shaw and TV personality Karl Stefanovic to promote Glyco Balance, a dietary supplement, falsely claiming it treats type 2 diabetes better than metformin medication. The fraudulent ads, which circulated on Facebook before removal, raised serious health concerns as patients contacted Shaw's clinic considering stopping their prescribed medications based on the fake medical advice. This represents an escalating trend of AI-generated video scams targeting public figures to market unproven health products, with experts warning that such sophisticated deepfakes are increasingly difficult for the public to identify as fraudulent.
huffpost.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2021, gift cards were the top payment method used by scammers, resulting in $148 million in stolen funds from consumers. Scammers tamper with physical gift cards on store display racks by removing protective film, recording card and PIN numbers, and covering their tracks, then use computer programs to drain funds when victims activate the cards. Unlike credit and debit cards, gift cards lack protections under the Electronic Funds Transfer Act, making it difficult for consumers to recover fraudulently used funds, and experts recommend buying cards from the back of display racks, under cashier supervision, online from reputable retailers, or giving cash instead.
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
Rebecca C. Lutzko announced her resignation as U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, effective January 3, 2025, with First Assistant U.S. Attorney Carol M. Skutnik assuming the role. During her tenure leading approximately 175 prosecutors and staff, Lutzko's office oversaw prosecutions involving violent crime, organized gang activity, financial crime, public corruption, drug trafficking, child exploitation, and cybercrime, while also recovering tens of millions of dollars in healthcare fraud and civil cases across Ohio's 40 northern counties.
finance.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
The New York StateWide Senior Action Council identified Medicare Prescription Drug Cap Scams as its January fraud alert, warning seniors about schemes exploiting the new $2,000 annual out-of-pocket prescription drug limit that began January 1, 2025. Common tactics include unsolicited calls requesting personal information, demands for upfront "processing fees" to access benefits, and claims that beneficiaries need additional cards or documentation. The council advises seniors to never share personal information with unsolicited callers, verify Medicare statements, and report suspected fraud to the NYS Medicare Fraud Helpline at 800-333-4374.
prnewswire.com
· 2025-12-08
As of January 1, 2025, Medicare implemented a $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap for prescription drugs under Part D, but scammers are exploiting this new benefit through fraudulent schemes including unsolicited calls requesting personal information, demands for upfront "processing fees" to qualify for the cap, and false claims requiring extra documentation or cards. The New York StateWide Senior Action Council warns seniors not to share personal information with unsolicited contacts, to verify Medicare statements, and to report suspected fraud to the NYS Medicare Fraud Helpline at 800-333-4374, noting that Medicare fraud costs taxpayers over $60 billion annually.
thedailystar.com
· 2025-12-08
The New York StateWide Senior Action Council identified Medicare Prescription Drug Cap Scams as January 2025's fraud alert, warning seniors about potential exploitation of the new $2,000 annual out-of-pocket drug cost cap that took effect January 1, 2025. Scammers may use unsolicited calls, fake upfront fees, or requests for personal information to defraud beneficiaries, and the council advises seniors not to share personal data, verify Medicare statements carefully, and report suspected fraud to the NYS Medicare Helpline at 800-333-4114.
newsbug.info
· 2025-12-08
Oak Grove Christian Retirement Village hosted an educational presentation by DeMotte police on January 8 covering elder financial abuse, which costs seniors over $3 billion annually with more than 13% of American elders victimized yearly. The presentation outlined eleven common scam types targeting seniors (including grandparent scams, charity fraud, identity theft, and tech support scams), noting that victims aged 80-89, particularly women living alone, face the highest risk and that underreporting remains severe due to embarrassment and fear of losing independence. Key protective measures include monthly financial monitoring, verifying requests by calling contacts directly, reporting fraud to the FTC, and consulting trusted advisors before financial decisions.
spectrumlocalnews.com
· 2025-12-08
hoodline.com
· 2025-12-08
Kaua'i County's Agency on Elderly Affairs organized an educational event on February 12 featuring Kupuna Alert Partners to teach seniors about fraud and scam prevention, including Medicare fraud, identity theft, securities fraud, and prescription drug misuse. The free community event included presentations and resource tables from multiple government agencies, with pre-registration encouraged and accessibility accommodations available upon request.
newsbug.info
· 2025-12-08
Oak Grove Christian Retirement Village hosted an educational program featuring DeMotte police officials who presented information on elder financial abuse, which affects over 13% of American seniors annually and costs victims more than $3 billion yearly. The presentation covered eleven common scam types targeting seniors—including grandparent scams, charity fraud, phishing, and tax scams—while noting that victims aged 80-89, particularly women and those living alone, are most vulnerable, and that only 1 in 44 incidents are reported due to embarrassment and fear of losing independence. Attendees learned protective strategies such as verifying requests before sending money, monitoring financial statements, and reporting scams to the FTC or calling
kauainownews.com
· 2025-12-08
The County of Kauaʻi Agency on Elderly Affairs, in partnership with multiple state agencies through Kupuna Alert Partners, is hosting a free fraud and scam prevention presentation to address a rising tide of scams targeting seniors, particularly romance scams ahead of Valentine's Day. Romance scams involve criminals creating fake online identities to build trust with victims over weeks or months before soliciting money through fabricated emergencies, often requesting payment via mail, wire transfers, or gift cards. The presentation will cover Medicare fraud, securities fraud, identity theft, and prescription drug misuse prevention, with the U.S. Postal Service emphasizing caution against online relationships that escalate quickly and recommending victims never
ndtv.com
· 2025-12-08
Aurora Phelps, a 43-year-old Las Vegas woman, used dating apps (Tinder, Hinge, Bumble) to lure multiple men to Mexico, where she drugged them with sedatives and prescription drugs, then stole their money, financial information, vehicles, and identities. Between 2021-2022, Phelps targeted at least four men, stealing approximately $3.3 million in Apple shares from one victim's E-Trade account, and is currently in custody in Mexico facing 21 charges including wire fraud, identity theft, kidnapping, and one man's death; she could face life in prison if convicted.
pcmag.com
· 2025-12-08
**Article Type:** Educational/Awareness piece on elder fraud prevention
Kerry Tomlinson, a cybersecurity expert and former TV reporter, presented research at RSAC 2025 on why older adults (60+) are vulnerable to online scams and fraud. Older adults lost an average of $83,000 per scam in the past year, primarily through social engineering attacks that exploit stress, fear, and urgency by impersonating authority figures. Tomlinson emphasizes that retirement, cognitive changes, physical limitations (vision and hearing loss), and loss of self-efficacy contribute to vulnerability, and recommends approaching elder protection with empathy rather than frustration or removing
finance.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Doctor spoofing calls, where scammers manipulate caller ID to impersonate doctors' offices, Medicare, pharmacies, or hospitals, were named the New York StateWide Senior Action Council's Medicare Fraud of the Month for June 2025. Scammers use these spoofed calls to trick seniors into revealing personal information such as Medicare numbers, Social Security numbers, and insurance details by claiming to need verification for medical services or test results. Seniors can protect themselves by hanging up and calling back using trusted phone numbers, never sharing personal information with unknown callers, avoiding "YES" or "NO" responses, and reporting suspected fraud to the NYS Senior Medicare Patrol Helpline at
stacker.com
· 2025-12-08
This editorial piece highlights rising scam trends identified in July news coverage, including romance scams (which affected over 70,000 people in 2022 with $1.3 billion in losses), AI-powered impersonation scams (which increased 148% between April 2024 and March 2025), and counterfeit drug schemes. The author emphasizes the value of scam awareness journalism in helping readers protect themselves and vulnerable populations like elderly relatives from evolving fraud threats across technology and dating platforms.
koat.com
· 2025-12-08
A 26-year-old certified nurse assistant in New Mexico, April Guadalupe Hernandez, was charged with 19 counts of misconduct including nursing without a license, identity theft, abuse of a resident, and fraud for falsifying nursing credentials and stealing identities of nurses from Texas, California, and Kansas. Over one year, Hernandez worked at three hospice centers using different name variations, claiming to hold higher nursing credentials than she possessed, and made a potentially fatal medication error (an overdose of morphine) that was caught before administration; she has an arraignment scheduled for September 8th.
consumer.ftc.gov
· 2025-12-07
During Medicare Open Enrollment Period (October 15-December 7), scammers impersonate Medicare representatives and contact seniors unsolicited, falsely claiming they need a new Medicare card and requesting Medicare numbers, bank account information, or payments—when legitimate Medicare cards are free and automatically mailed. To protect themselves, seniors should ignore unexpected requests for personal or financial information, verify caller identity by hanging up and calling 1-800-MEDICARE directly, and use official resources like Medicare.gov or their State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) for plan comparisons. Suspected Medicare fraud should be reported to 1-800-MEDICARE and the FTC at ReportFrau
consumer.ftc.gov
· 2025-12-07
During Medicare Open Enrollment Period (October 15-December 7), scammers impersonate Medicare representatives and contact seniors unexpectedly, requesting personal information, Medicare numbers, or payments under the false pretense of issuing new or updated Medicare cards. Medicare never contacts beneficiaries unsolicited to request financial information or payment, as legitimate Medicare cards are free and mailed automatically. To protect yourself, ignore unexpected calls demanding personal information, verify suspicious calls by independently dialing 1-800-MEDICARE, use official resources like Medicare.gov and your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) for plan information, and report scams to 1-800-MEDICARE and the FTC at Re
1380kcim.com
· 2025-12-07
The Iowa Insurance Division is warning Medicare beneficiaries about scams during the 2026 open enrollment period (October 15–December 7), which scammers exploit to steal personal information and fraudulently enroll individuals in new plans. Common schemes include unsolicited calls and texts requesting Medicare numbers or personal data, with Medicare fraud costing an estimated $100 billion annually. Free assistance is available through certified SHIIP counselors across Iowa to help beneficiaries safely navigate enrollment decisions.