Grandparents increasingly targeted by impostors who know "everything" about them

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by 1975-2050
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The government is releasing new information about a growing scam targeting older Americans. It tricks people into mailing cash to people pretending to be their grandchildren. Victims reportedly lose an average of $9,000.

"I'm the last person, I thought, would ever fall for a scam like this," Franc Stratton told CBS News correspondent Anna Werner.

The retired Tennessean spent his career working in intelligence, first for the Air Force and later as a cybersecurity programmer. But his expertise still didn't prepare him for the scam that began with a morning phone call in April.

"I hear, 'Don't be afraid, but I'm the public defender from Austin, Texas. They have put your grandson in jail after a wreck, and he has a DUI offense,'" Stratton said.

The man said Stratton could bail out his grandson if he sent $8,500 cash via FedEx, something that might sound ridiculous, except that Stratton had actually done just that for a family member once in the past.

Not only that, but the "attorney" briefly put his "grandson" – who sounded injured – on the phone. So Stratton drove to the bank.

"I wrote a check out, and they gave me $8,500 cash in hundreds," Stratton said.

Then he went to a local mail location to overnight the money to an Austin address. Stratton said he fell for it "because of the way that they scripted it."

"They had it so well scripted. They knew everything about my grandson. They knew everything about me," Stratton said.

He's not the only victim. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) said Americans lost up to $41 million in the scam this year, nearly twice as much as last year. The FTC said people 70 and older are increasingly being scammed, and the criminals do their research, sometimes using social media to learn more about their targets.

"Grandparents really care about their grandchildren. The grandchildren sound like they're in terrible distress. They're crying, they're saying that they've been injured frequently and they're begging their grandparent to help them," FTC's Monica Vaca said.

But back in Tennessee that night in April, Stratton said, "My wife and I looked at each other and said, 'Scam.'"

So he called FedEx to have to package returned. While he got his money back, he said, "I'm a security person. And that's what really frustrates me."

"Because I fell for it," Stratton added.

"Even you fell for it," Werner said.

"Because of love," he responded – something Stratton said every grandparent can fall victim to.

The FTC warns if you receive a call like this, get in touch with that family member or friend before sending anything. Be careful about what you post on social media because scammers can use those details.

skolnation92 on December 3rd, 2018 at 16:08 UTC »

Someone tied to rip off my grandpa for $8000 a few weeks ago.

Someone called him claiming to be me, saying that I had been arrested in connection with an armed robbery. They told him I was being held for 72 hours and that I needed $8000 for bail. After talking to "me" he talked to the "persecutor" who proceeded to give him the details on how to send the money etc. Luckily my grandpa still has all his beans and could tell something wasn't right. He told them to let me sit for the 72 hours since it would probably serve me right and instantly called me directly lol.

freecain on December 3rd, 2018 at 14:33 UTC »

My grandmother actually fell for one years ago. My cousin had some legal trouble shortly before the call, so it wasn't entirely out of the blue to get a call. The part that makes it golden: trying to explain to my grandmother how to send money. They wanted her to get some sort of money card from a convenience store, but she didn't know where it was. Despite her earnestly wanting to send the money, the scammers could not figure out how to close the deal.

So, I'm pissed some scammer tried to steal from my grandmother... but at least they got an hour of giving tech support to a 90+ year old.

Comassion on December 3rd, 2018 at 14:10 UTC »

I've had attempts made on two of my grandparents.

One of those was impersonating me. My grandmother (father's side) got a call from 'me' but she was savvy enough to ask for more details like my wife's name - dude didn't know it.

My grandfather (mother's side) unfortunately fell for it - someone pretending to be my cousin called him up, said he was in legal trouble and needed money for a lawyer, didn't want his parents to know. Got him to wire 5,000 dollars up through western union. By the time the family found out about it, it was too late - money saved up by a WWII vet for his retirement, gone.

I hope that law enforcement goes after these people, and that the penalties are quite harsh.