1. Health
Care/Medicare/Health Insurance Fraud
Every U.S. citizen or permanent resident over age 65 qualifies for Medicare, so there is rarely
any need for a scam artist to research what private health insurance company older people have in order to scam them out of
some money. In these types of scams, perpetrators may pose as a Medicare representative to get older people to give
them their personal information, or they will provide bogus services for elderly people at makeshift mobile clinics, then
use the personal information they provide to bill Medicare and pocket the money.
2. Counterfeit Prescription Drugs
Most commonly, counterfeit
drug scams operate on the Internet, where seniors increasingly go to find better prices on specialized medications.
This scam is growing in popularity—since 2000, the FDA has investigated an average of 20 such cases per year, up from
five a year in the 1990s. The danger is that besides paying money for something that will not help a person’s
medical condition, victims may purchase unsafe substances that can inflict even more harm. This scam can be as hard on the
body as it is on the wallet.
3. Funeral & Cemetery Scams
The FBI warns about two types
of funeral and cemetery fraud perpetrated on seniors. In one approach, scammers read obituaries and call or attend the funeral
service of a complete stranger to take advantage of the grieving widow or widower. Claiming the deceased had an outstanding
debt with them, scammers will try to extort money from relatives to settle the fake debts. Another tactic of disreputable
funeral homes is to capitalize on family members’ unfamiliarity with the considerable cost of funeral services to add
unnecessary charges to the bill. In one common scam of this type, funeral directors will insist that a casket, usually one
of the most expensive parts of funeral services, is necessary even when performing a direct cremation, which can be accomplished
with a cardboard casket rather than an expensive display or burial casket.
4. Fraudulent Anti-Aging Products
In a society bombarded with
images of the young and beautiful, it’s not surprising that some older people feel the need to conceal their age in
order to participate more fully in social circles and the workplace. After all, 60 is the new 40, right? It is in this
spirit that many older Americans seek out new treatments and medications to maintain a youthful appearance, putting them at
risk of scammers. Whether it’s fake Botox like the one in Arizona that netted its distributors (who were convicted
and jailed in 2006) $1.5 million in barely a year, or completely bogus homeopathic remedies that do absolutely nothing, there
is money in the anti-aging business. Botox scams are particularly unsettling, as renegade labs creating versions of
the real thing may still be working with the root ingredient, botulism neurotoxin, which is one of the most toxic substances
known to science. A bad batch can have health consequences far beyond wrinkles or drooping neck muscles.
5. Telemarketing
Perhaps the most common scheme
is when scammers use fake telemarketing calls to prey on older people, who as a group make twice as many purchases over the
phone than the national average. While the image of the lonely senior citizen with nobody to talk to may have something to
do with this, it is far more likely that older people are more familiar with shopping over the phone, and therefore might
not be fully aware of the risk. With no face-to-face interaction, and no paper trail, these scams are incredibly hard
to trace. Also, once a successful deal has been made, the buyer’s name is then shared with similar schemers looking
for easy targets, sometimes defrauding the same person repeatedly.
Examples of telemarketing fraud include:
“The Pigeon Drop”
The con artist tells the individual
that he/she has found a large sum of money and is willing to split it if the person will make a “good faith” payment
by withdrawing funds from his/her bank account. Often, a second con artist is involved, posing as a lawyer, banker, or some
other trustworthy stranger.
“The Fake Accident Ploy”
The con artist gets the victim to wire or send money on the
pretext
that
the person’s child or another relative is in the hospital and needs the money.
“Charity Scams”
Money is solicited for fake
charities. This often occurs after natural disasters.
6. Internet Fraud
While using the Internet is a great skill at any age, the slower
speed of adoption among some older people makes them easier targets for automated Internet scams that are ubiquitous on the
web and email programs. Pop-up browser windows simulating virus-scanning software will fool victims into either downloading
a fake anti-virus program (at a substantial cost) or an actual virus that will open up whatever information is on the user’s
computer to scammers. Their unfamiliarity with the less visible aspects of browsing the web (firewalls and built-in virus
protection, for example) make seniors especially susceptible to such traps.
One example includes:
Email/Phishing Scams
A senior receives email messages
that appear to be from a legitimate company or institution, asking them to “update” or “verify” their
personal information. A senior receives emails that appear to be from the IRS about a tax refund.
7. Investment Schemes
Because many seniors find
themselves planning for retirement and managing their savings once they finish working, a number of investment schemes have
been targeted at seniors looking to safeguard their cash for their later years. From pyramid schemes like Bernie Madoff’s
(which counted a number of senior citizens among its victims) to fables of a Nigerian prince looking for a partner to claim
inheritance money to complex financial products that many economists don’t even understand, investment schemes have
long been a successful way to take advantage of older people.
8. Homeowner/Reverse Mortgage Scams
Scammers like to take advantage
of the fact that many people above a certain age own their homes, a valuable asset that increases the potential dollar value
of a certain scam. A particularly elaborate property tax scam in San Diego saw fraudsters sending personalized letters to
different properties apparently on behalf of the County Assessor ’s Office. The letter, made to look official but displaying
only public information, would identify the property’s assessed value and offer the homeowner, for a fee of course,
to arrange for a reassessment of the property’s value and therefore the tax burden associated with it. Closely related,
the reverse mortgage scam has mushroomed in recent years. With legitimate reverse mortgages increasing in frequency more than
1,300% between 1999 and 2008, scammers are taking advantage of this new popularity. As opposed to official refinancing schemes,
however, unsecured reverse mortgages can lead property owners to lose their homes when the perpetrators offer money or a free
house somewhere else in exchange for the title to the property.
9. Sweepstakes & Lottery Scams
This simple scam is one that
many are familiar with, and it capitalizes on the notion that “there’s no such thing as a free lunch.” Here,
scammers inform their mark that they have won a lottery or sweepstakes of some kind and need to make some sort of payment
to unlock the supposed prize. Often, seniors will be sent a check that they can deposit in their bank account, knowing that
while it shows up in their account immediately, it will take a few days before the (fake) check is rejected. During that time,
the criminals will quickly collect money for supposed fees or taxes on the prize, which they pocket while the victim has the
“prize money” removed from his or her account as soon as the check bounces.
10. The Grandparent Scam
The Grandparent Scam is so
simple and so devious because it uses one of older adults’ most reliable assets, their hearts. Scammers will place a
call to an older person and when the mark picks up, they will say something along the lines of: “Hi Grandma, do you
know who this is?” When the unsuspecting grandparent guesses the name of the grandchild the scammer most sounds like,
the scammer has established a fake identity without having done a lick of background research. Once “in,” the
fake grandchild will usually ask for money to solve some unexpected financial problem (overdue rent, payment for car repairs,
etc.), to be paid via Western Union or MoneyGram, which don’t always require identification to collect. At the same
time, the scam artist will beg the grandparent “please don’t tell my parents, they would kill me.” While
the sums from such a scam are likely to be in the hundreds, the very fact that no research is needed makes this a scam that
can be perpetrated over and over at very little cost to the scammer.