CONSUMER
ALERT
MIKE COX
ATTORNEY GENERAL
The Attorney General provides Consumer
Alerts to inform the public of unfair, misleading, or deceptive business
practices, and to provide information and guidance on other issues of concern. Consumer alerts are not legal advice, legal authority, or a binding legal opinion from the Department of Attorney General.
GRANDPARENTS SCAM
TELEPHONE CON ARTISTS TARGET
SENIOR CITIZENS' USING "DISTRESSED LOVED-ONE" TACTIC
Across the nation, con artists
are scamming grandparents out of thousands of dollars by posing as grandchildren
in distress. In Michigan, grandparents were taken for $33,000. They wire
transferred $3,000 to someone they thought was their grandson after he called
and claimed he was caught fishing without a license in Canada and needed to pay
a $3,000 fine. They were taken for an additional $30,000 after the supposed
grandson called again to say that alcohol and drugs were found when his boat was
searched, and he needed $30,000 to post bond to get out of a Canadian jail.
how the scam works
A grandparent receives a
frantic call from someone they believe to be their grandchild. The supposed
grandchild sounds distressed and may be calling from a noisy location. The
supposed grandchild claims to be involved in some type of trouble while
traveling in Canada, such as being arrested or in a car accident or needing
emergency car repairs, and asks the grandparent to immediately wire money to
post bail or pay for medical treatment or car repairs. The scammer typically
asks for several thousand dollars, and may even call back again several hours or
days later asking for more money. He or she may claim embarrassment about the
alleged trouble and ask the grandparent to keep it a secret.
A variation of the scam may
involve two scammers ? the first scammer calls and poses as a grandchild under
arrest. The second scammer, posing as some type of law enforcement officer,
then gets on the phone with the grandparent and explains what fines need to be
paid. Alternatively, the scammer may pretend to be a family friend or
neighbor. A common theme of the scam across the nation is the caller's request
for the grandparent to wire money through Western Union or MoneyGram or to
provide bank account routing numbers. Wire transfers of money are nearly
impossible to trace and typically cannot be recovered from the telephone con
artists.
It is possible that the
scammers are finding their targets on the Internet. Names, addresses, birth
dates, and telephone numbers are easily ascertained online. Another possibility
is that the scammers are calling telephone numbers randomly until they reach a
senior citizen. In some cases, the senior citizen unknowingly "fills in the
blanks" for the thief. For instance, the senior answers the phone, the scammer
says something like, "Hi Grandma, it's me, your favorite grandchild," the
grandparent guesses the name of the grandchild the caller sounds most like, and
the scammer takes on that grandchild's identity for the remainder of the call.
HOW TO AVOID BEING SCAMMED
Be suspicious when you receive
a telephone call where:
-
A grandchild calls you from a
far away location
-
The grandchild says, "It's
me," or "It's your grandson," or "It's your favorite grandchild."
-
The grandchild is in some
trouble or some type of distress
-
The caller asks for money to
be wire transferred
If you receive such a call, you
should verify the identity and location of the grandchild claiming to be in
trouble. You should hang up and call another family member who can confirm your
grandchild's whereabouts. Try calling your grandchild at the telephone number
through which you normally reach him or her. Stay calm and avoid acting out of
a sense of urgency. Do not wire money unless you have verified with an
independent third party that your grandchild is truly in trouble.
In addition, never give
out any personal identifying information such as bank account or credit card
numbers to anyone who calls you on the phone. As in the Grandparents Scam, con
artists will lie, cheat, steal, and make up plausible stories to convince you to
wire money or divulge sensitive information. The callers are often professional
criminals who are skillfully able to get you to wire money or give personal
information before you have time to properly assess the situation. For further
information, see the Consumer Alert, "Telemarketing Fraud: Never Give Personal
Information to Unknown Callers," at
http://mich.gov/ag/0,1607,7-164-34739_20942-131622--,00.html.
WHAT TO DO IF YOU HAVE BEEN
SCAMMED
Consumers may
contact the Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division at:
Consumer Protection Division
P.O. Box 30213
Lansing, MI 48909
517-373-1140
Fax: 517-241-3771
Toll free: 877-765-8388
www.michigan.gov/ag (online complaint
form)
In addition, if the request for
money involved a wire transfer to Canada, Canadian officials in the Anti-Fraud
Call Centre ask victims to report the fraud at their PhoneBusters hotline at
1-888-495-8501 or on their website at
www.phonebusters.com.