
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, youâre a grandparent, and you get a phone call or an e-mail from someone who identifies himself as your grandson. âIâve been arrested in another country,â he says, âand need money wired quickly to pay my bail. And oh by the way, donât tell my mom or dad because theyâll only get upset!â
This is an example of whatâs come to be known as âthe grandparent scamââyet another fraud that preys on the elderly, this time by taking advantage of their love and concern for their grandchildren.
The grandparent scam has been around for a few yearsâour Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) has been receiving reports about it since 2008. But the scam and scam artists have become more sophisticated. Thanks to the Internet and social networking sites, a criminal can sometimes uncover personal information about their targets, which makes the impersonations more believable. For example, the actual grandson may mention on his social networking site that heâs a photographer who often travels to Mexico. When contacting the grandparents, the phony grandson will say heâs calling from Mexico, where someone stole his camera equipment and passport.
Common scenarios include:
- A grandparent receives a phone call (or sometimes an e-mail) from a âgrandchild.â If it is a phone call, itâs often late at night or early in the morning when most people arenât thinking that clearly. Usually, the person claims to be traveling in a foreign country and has gotten into a bad situation, like being arrested for drugs, getting in a car accident, or being muggedâŚand needs money wired ASAP. And the caller doesnât want his or her parents told.
- Sometimes, instead of the âgrandchildâ making the phone call, the criminal pretends to be an arresting police officer, a lawyer, a doctor at a hospital, or some other person. And weâve also received complaints about the phony grandchild talking first and then handing the phone over to an accompliceâŚto further spin the fake tale.
- Weâve also seen military families victimized: after perusing a soldierâs social networking site, a con artist will contact the soldierâs grandparents, sometimes claiming that a problem came up during military leave that requires money to address.
- While itâs commonly called the grandparent scam, criminals may also claim to be a family friend, a niece or nephew, or another family member.
What to do if you have been scammed. The financial losses in these casesâwhile they can be substantial for an individual, usually several thousand dollars per victimâtypically donât meet the FBIâs financial thresholds for opening an investigation. We recommend contacting your local authorities or state consumer protection agency if you think youâve been victimized. We also suggest you file a complaint with IC3, which not only forwards complaints to the appropriate agencies, but also collates and analyzes the dataâlooking for common threads that link complaints and help identify the culprits.
And, our advice to avoid being victimized in the first place:
- Resist the pressure to act quickly.
- Try to contact your grandchild or another family member to determine whether or not the call is legitimate.
- Never wire money based on a request made over the phone or in an e-mail…especially overseas. Wiring money is like giving cashâonce you send it, you canât get it back.
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