Remember ME - You Me and Dementia

October 22, 2007

USA: Seniors Are Easy Targets For Scams - Too Trusting Or Just Stupid?

SENIORS TOO TRUSTING? OR JUST STUPID?
That retirees are easy targets for scams may be more myth than meaningful


By Frank Kaiser

We come from that distant past where neighbors helped neighbors, and strangers were always given a meal or a lift. It was a time when folks never locked their doors.

Today's seniors are the last generation of Americans to trust one another.

What a shame, then, that such virtue is today twisted and tailored by countless scammers to pick the pockets of the elderly through charity scams, Medicare scams, Social Security scams, sweepstakes scams, counterfeit drug scams, investing scams, even scams that promise to get back money we've lost in another scam!
The world will never run out of scams!

Judging from the thick menu of available fraudulent operations, corps of con artists scheme overtime inventing variations on two main themes: 1) Watch out! And 2) Get rich quick!

Good old fear and greed. Yes, they make the world go round, keeping everything from scams to stock markets to the military/industrial complex greased and oiled.

E-mails are often the carrier of choice. Just this morning, three of them triggered "Spam Alert" alarms in my head:

"To confirm your Online Banking records click on the following link..." This e-mail, supposedly from Bank of America, tells me that if I don't give up my password, Social Security and account numbers, B of A "will be forced to suspend your account indefinitely, as it may have been used for fraudulent purposes."


Thing is, I don't have a Bank of America account.

Yet another e-mail from a generous Nigerian official offers me millions if I'll only send a thousand or so "to get the processing rolling." That anyone still falls for this hoary scam of fame and fable amazes me. But they do.


Finally, an official looking e-mail from the IRS claims that the revenue service has "complaints regarding the lack of reporting of pension income." They ask that I open an attachment to learn specifics about the investigation. The first time I received this particular invitation to be scammed, even though I receive no pension, I was so alarmed I almost fell for it.

Only an innate sense of wariness and a relatively clean conscience drove me to check www.snopes.com before opening the attachment, a missive that I learned would plant a dangerous Trojan Horse in my computer.
No Free Lunch (But You Knew That!)

Not to be out-criminalized by digital hustlers, snail-mail thieves also exhibit a smorgasbord of something for nothing. Mine today holds an offer of a "Free Lunch!" at which I will learn how to make a minimum of 20 percent on my retirement savings "through the miracle of a compound interest annuity."

If only!

These crooks seem to believe that we seniors are a bunch of doddering old fools just waiting to hand over our life savings to the first smile that comes bearing improbable promises. Crooks and politicians alike — often in the same person — believe that seniors are low hanging fruit easily flimflammed — gullible, stupid, or both.

Are we really so thin of thought that we'll fall for anything? Not in the world I inhabit.

Here we're all from Missouri. Years of experience, sometimes bitter, have taught us a thing or two. More than most, we know that if it's too good to be true, it's truly too good to be true. Really! That alone saves us a bundle of trouble.

Sure, we occasionally get burned. Before the word phishing was even coined, I fell for an official looking e-mail from PayPal asking that I reaffirm all my personal information, including my password. Being a "good senior" and susceptible to my generation's disposition to never question authority, I followed instructions.

Then it dawned on me!

Why would PayPal ask for information they already had? I hurried to the site, at once changing my password and forwarding the e-mail to PayPal security. Even though I had little or nothing in the account it was a close call, never to be forgotten.

Yes, I mourn for those long-gone days of trust and innocence, wishing that younger generations could experience and know that such behavior is even possible. But as much as anyone, my generation's greed and neglect of the powerful idea of citizenship killed those days, perhaps forever.

And who knows? At my age, I'm not certain that those good old days may be but a product of selective recall, just as mythical as rumors of senior susceptibility to scams.

Source: http://www.suddenlysenior.com/
Copyright 2007 — Frank Kaiser