Are Our Aging Parents Sitting Ducks?

Are Our Aging Parents Sitting Ducks?

Two ruthless swindlers were arrested in New York for tricking an elderly woman out of her multi-million-dollar property in Harlem she had owned for over 40 years.

A home care worker bilked a frail elder out of her life’s savings of $350,000.

These stories keep coming up. Family members do it.   Salesmen touting unsuitable annuities do it.  Realtors collude with thieves and they do it.   Even lawyers do it.  They prey on unsuspecting or impaired elders to rip them off.

Financial elder abuse is a problem all across the world and it’s growing.  We need to be aware.

My mother in law, Alice, is 90 and still very sharp.  She would be hard to fool, but I know the right thief could probably do some harm if we weren’t watching closely all that goes on financially.  At least she has the good sense to question something that sounds too good to be true.  Here’s an example.

She got a check in the mail for $3800, legitimate looking, advising that she was the second place winner of a sweepstakes in Canada. She does play various sweepstakes. All she had to do, of course, was to deposit it and “pay the taxes” on her “winnings”.  She was advised to contact her “claims agent”.  No doubt, that professional thief would have done a great job convincing someone unsuspecting to deposit the check and send “taxes”.  Of course the check is rubber and the money is gone before the elder finds out that the check has bounced.

Classic scam.  Alice called the number and said, “How do I know you’re legitimate?’  The thief told her if she was suspicious, she should hang up.  She did. She then called my husband, Dr. Mikol Davis, who did an internet search for the phony address and told her she had just thwarted a thief.  Alice is with it enough to question the check.  Millions of seniors with any cognitive impairment are not so able to question things like this.

What we know from research into Alzheimer’s Disease is that one’s judgment about financial transactions may be the first thing to become impaired when the disease is in the earliest stages.  “Mild cognitive impairment” as doctors may call it, is not so mild when you think about the financial damage that can result.  And the elder with this early warning sign of dementia may be living independently, paying taxes on time and otherwise appearing socially normal. For a time.

Professional thieves have certainly studied what makes elders vulnerable.  They buy names of people who have entered contests like sweepstakes, and troll for the isolated and lonely ones who will talk to someone on the phone.  The sweepstakes officials get paid for selling the lists and no one cares what the buyer does with them.

Elders are truly sitting ducks, easy prey.  Isolation, confusion, forgetfulness, and fears about running out of money can all drive the susceptibility to entering into a “deal” with a clever scammer.

If you have an aging parent or loved one with any form of mild cognitive impairment, early dementia or other disease that affects thinking and judgment, here are seven basic things family can do to reduce the risks of ripoff.

1.  Check in often. If your aging parent lives alone this is crucial.  One of my clients at AgingParents.com emails her dad every day to check in. Others call every day or close to it.  Aging parents may not think they need this but they do.

2.  Ask to be a co-signer on the main bank account in case of emergency.  Some aging parents will agree and some will resist, but ask regardless.  It will allow you to do online monitoring of the account activity.  A “new friend” who gets money from them is a huge red flag.

3.  Have your parent sign a Durable Power of Attorney appointing a competent and ethical agent, which could be you, a sibling or trusted other.  If cognitive decline happens, the agent can at least get the money out of the account and put into another safer one that the impaired elder can’t access. This is one way to stop the thieves who are looking for impaired elders.  Nothing in the account, no gain for them.

4.  Suggest having your parent use a licensed fiduciary to handle money if they don’t want you to do it.    If there are issues of not trusting you, an objective professional can protect them from abuse. You might do research to find a reputable one for them.  This is also a safe bet for elders you know with no adult kids.

5.  Provide and encourage parents’ connection to others. Think of isolation and loneliness as two big risk factors in why elders get financially abused.  If you can provide encouragement for them to get involved in activities, it will make them less likely to want to talk to a smooth, slick “friendly” con artist on the phone.

6.  Monitor who comes into your parents’ home regularly.  Even the most trusted housekeeper, gardener, caregiver or bookkeeper can be tempted beyond reason when their own financial circumstances change for the worse.  Your parents are all the more at risk when they trust the familiar person, who can use trust to exploit them.

7.   Do background checks on any home care helpers who are hired to work for Mom or Dad.  The cost is modest, and you can find out a lot:  bankruptcies, poor driving records, and of course, criminal convictions and civil cases. Licensed home care agencies may do background checks, but ask to be sure.

The ripoff artists out there are both clever and relentless, but we can stop many of their opportunities.  Please don’t take your aging parents’ financial judgment for granted.  It can erode almost without notice, even in the brightest and most accomplished elders.

Until next time,

Carolyn Rosenblatt

Dr. Mikol Davis

AgingInvestor.com

Would You Immediately Recognize These Elder Abuse Hidden Scams?

Would You Immediately Recognize These Elder Abuse Hidden Scams?

elderimageMost days at I get a call from an adult child of an elder, asking me about shady dealings over a parent’s finances. Sometimes it’s the niece, grandson, or other family member the caller is worried about. Sometimes it’s the caller’s sibling whose actions are in question. And all the cases I hear about have something in common: red flags of elder abuse are present, but no one is taking any action to stop them.

For example, a 62 year old woman whose mother is 90 called and said she is worried because she lives at a distance from her mother and her niece who is caring for the mother won’t return her calls or emails. And she also told me that a step-brother is a stockbroker and has financial power of attorney over her mother.

That’s 2 red flags, and she was just warming up.
Most abusers are family members. Caregivers are next and professionals, like stockbrokers, lawyers, financial advisers and insurance brokers are next in line for frequency of abuse. I do all I can to educate and urge action by family members to stop abuse when it happens and when it’s suspected to get a closer look.

I recently saw a new publication from our government, designed to raise people’s awareness about financial abuse and what an agent should and should not do when acting as agent on a financial power of attorney document.

Elder abuse is a huge international problem, and it’s finally getting more attention from the Federal government, thanks in part to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. They came out with an excellent free little booklet to help folks understand how to handle someone else’s money when they get appointed as a Power of Attorney. It’s called Managing Someone Else’s Money: Help for agents under a power of attorney.

You can get it here: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201310_cfpb_lay_fiduciary_guides_agents.pdf.

Here’s what I like about this booklet.

It’s clear. It tells you what you can and can’t do as an agent. If you’re interested in being honest, it gives your guidelines to keep it that way. On the other side of the question, unscrupulous agents use the paper as a license to steal. Unfortunately, no court is involved and no one is watching. They help themselves to an elder’s money, house, investments, and anything else of value and some seniors are left destitute. I believe that sometimes, education can help family members stop other family members from committing this abuse. They can also warn the elder who is living independently about the sneaky thieves who devise ways to get elders’ money that are not so obvious. The booklet warns about some common scams. Not everyone knows about these and they keep getting victims to give up money.

The booklet lists 10 scams. I’ve picked a few to reiterate here for you. Would you know about these if they were going on with your elder right now?

1. Relative in need. Someone pretending to be a family member or friend calls or emails and says they are in trouble and need the elder to wire money right away. And by the way, you don’t have to be frail and isolated to get one of these pitches. I got one myself recently. Someone had hijacked my sister’s email address and sent emails to all of her like named contacts asking to wire money to her in a foreign country. Didn’t work with me, but it does get people to wire money to thieves. If no one fell for the scam they would stop, but it goes on.

2. Fake government funding. The recipient gets an official looking letter from a pretend government agency offering help with housing, home repairs, utilities or taxes. Just give them your credit card info and you get the help. Vulnerable and low income seniors fall for these scams because they are worried about the very things the ripoff artists offer them.

3. Home improvement. Targeted elders who own their homes (can be easily found in public records) are approached with an offer to fix something. It can be a roof, a fence or in my mother in law’s case it was to clean the air ducts. They take money in advance, overcharge and do shoddy work, or don’t do the work at all. The trusting elder doesn’t have a way to pursue them, as they disappear.

The booklet is 23 pages and has two pages of resources listed a the back. Among them are Adult Protective Services, and where to get free legal help for seniors. I think they did a fine job on this. Maybe that’s not the way I would comment on a lot of other confusing or poorly written government efforts at educating the public. And they don’t teach you this stuff in school. My hat’s off to the CFPB.

If you have an aging parent or other loved one, or you’re curious because your aging loved one put YOU on the documents that will one day cause you to have to handle their money, check out the booklet for yourself. I’m happy to share the good resource with you. Yep, your tax dollars at work.

Until next time,
Carolyn Rosenblatt

Dr. Mikol Davis
AgingParents.com and AgingInvestor.com

Can You Prevent Your Aging Clients From Falling For Scams?

Can You Prevent Your Aging Clients From Falling For Scams?

buy college essays onlineYour elderly clients are ripe for scammers to pick.  How is it that these clients, some very intelligent and accomplished, fall for these obvious ripoffs?

In a typical example the  U.S. Attorney’s office charged six defendants in a fraud scheme targeting the elderly .This time it was a lottery scam involving theft of a total of $400,000 from various victims. .  We see these reports often in the news, to the point that they seem very repetitive. The characters and the amount of money stolen from elders changes but the methods are the same over and over.  Other scams bring in millions from their vulnerable victims. The thieves in this case were caught.  Most are not.

Why do elders fall for these things?  Why don’t they get that the “Nigerian prince” or the “Jamaican Lottery” are clearly bogus and not to be trusted?  Isn’t it obvious?

There are various reasons why elders are such easy prey for these thieves.  One root cause is isolation and loneliness, a fact of life for many seniors who are not closely monitored by loved ones.  A pleasant, slick professional calls on the phone in a friendly and engaging manner and traps the vulnerable elder with kind words, attention and a feeling of connection.  The thieves are trained and smart.  They smell the kill. They know exactly what to say to get the elder to trust them.

Another very important factor is diminished cognition in the elder.The crooks know that if they have a thousand names purchased from magazine subscribers, U.S. lottery or state contests and they know the ages of those on the list, that their chances of finding victims are excellent.  Some of the elderly on the lists will be just impaired enough that they can’t see a scam coming.   At least a third of those aged 85 and above have dementia in some form.  Scammers simply buy the lists and start calling.  And there are no restrictions against selling the names and personal information such as ages, phone numbers, addresses, etc.to the highest bidder.  They can acquire the name and age of every subscriber to The Reader’s Digest, for example, providing fertile ground for seeking victims.  Research into the impairments of Alzheimer’s Disease tells us that financial judgment may be the first kind of judgment to erode, and it is not obvious at the beginning stages, though the impairment is significant.

Another reason why seniors fall for these ripoff schemes is that they feel financially insecure.  If there is a downturn in the market or whatever investments an aging client holds, he may feel a need to get easy  money or a high return, and when a con artist offers that, he’s likely to fall for it.  The right combination of loneliness, isolation, early dementia and fear make him an easy target.

Can you do anything about the problem?

I think you can. If you do care about your aging clients and want to remain a trusted advisor, a first protective step is to be aware of the risk of scams targeting the elderly.  At AgingInvestor.com, we recommend developing a policy for all aging clients that includes staying in more frequent contact with them than you are required to do. Here are 3 things that sort of policy might include:

1.  Schedule monitoring of how the elderly client is doing in general on a regular basis, the frequency of which you determine by thoughtful planning.  (Quarterly?  less often?) Check in by phone.  Reassure your client when investment losses happen, and ask how he’s feeling and what he’s doing in his personal life.  This does take time, but it can be very helpful to renew the client’s trust in you and remedy somewhat the feelings of isolation that can accompany aging. 

2.  Pay particular attention to recently widowed aging clients. The aftermath of loss of a spouse can be a dangerous time because of grief.  That makes people vulnerable to begin with and when you add some cognitive impairment to the mix you can see that thieves love the opportunity to cultivate these elders. Consider that deaths are public records and that scammers can easily collect lists of the recently widowed to pursue with their bogus offers.  They may start the conversation by expressing their phony empathy for the person’s loss and work on a relationship after that.

3.  Educate your client. She may have heard of scams and have a vague understanding of how they work,  but not be ready to spot one when the phone rings with any scheme to defraud her.  If you provide a respectful reminder, using a recent story of elder abuse by scammers published in news reports, which you can easily find any time, you just might cause your client to think twice before becoming engaged in conversation with a stranger who seems so nice and friendly. You can do your part to help  your aging clients  to beware of phone calls, contests and unknown people asking for personal information or money.

My mother in law, Alice is still quite sharp at age 91.  Someone tried the “lottery winner” scam with her too. She called the number on the  letter from the “Lottery Authority” and asked how she would know if they were legitimate.  The accented voice on the other end of the call said “well if you think this is fake, you can hang up.” So she did. End of scam.  Not all 91 year olds are so alert.  Given that, the financial advisor may be one of the few trusted people in a position to help them create a line of defense.

Would you  like to develop a policy specifically geared toward keeping your aging clients and keeping them safe from abuse? Get expert help with policy development and implement it with training at AgingInvestor.com.

Until next time,

Carolyn Rosenblatt

AgingInvestor.com