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Safety for the Elderly

Agency: State Police


Crimes Against Our Seniors

The issue of senior abuse is a growing problem as Michigan’s population grows older. According to the United States Census Bureau, persons over the age of 65 increased 21% in Michigan, while persons under the age of 65 decreased by 2%. It is projected that by the year 2010, two million Michigan residents will be over 65 years of age. That is 16.6% of Michigan’s projected population.

FACTS ABOUT ELDER ABUSE

The victims:

  • 75% of victims are female
  • 80% of all victims have income under $10,000 a year
  • The average age of abused elders is 75

The abusers:

  • The family is the single greatest source of elder abuse
  • In more than half the cases, the abuser is a child of the victim
  • Over 2/3 are middle aged or older
  • Most live with the victim
  • Most neglect is committed by female family members
  • Most physical abuse is committed by male family members

The causes:

  • Inability to deal with stress
  • Financial burdens
  • Unemployment
  • Job dissatisfaction
  • Rising cost of medical care
  • Demands on caregiver’s time
  • Rise in family violence

Types of abuse:

  • Physical abuse – This involves the beating of the elderly.
  • Neglect – This occurs when an elderly person is not receiving the basic day-to-day care that they need.
  • Psychological – This may involve the threat of violence, isolation, or deprivation of basic freedoms of choice and happiness
  • Financial – Many times the elderly turn their personal finances over to a family caregiver with the hope of avoiding probate court. Crimes committed are: theft, mismanagement of money, or the sale of property without consent.

Elderly crime victim statistics: (from the Michigan State Police Criminal Justice Information Center)

In 1999, overall crime was down 5% in Michigan, but crime against persons over 65 was up, including:

  • Larceny - up 4%
  • Fraud - up 8%
  • Burglary - up 11%
  • Stolen property - up 17%
  • Non-Aggravate Assault - up 18%
  • Neglect - up 36%

TELEMARKETING FRAUD

Most people think they are safe from crime when they are secure in their own home. The truth is criminals use the telephone as a tool to scam people of their savings, often with devastating consequences. Telemarketing fraud is believed to cost Americans $40 billion a year and older people are disproportionately targeted.

Why the Elderly are Targeted

  • Elderly are more trusting
  • Elderly are polite toward strangers
  • It’s hard to know a sales call is legitimate
  • Telemarketers call when they are feeling lonely
  • Telemarketers seem to have all the answers
  • Telemarketers offer free prizes and gifts

Types of phone scams

  • Prize offers
  • Travel packages
  • Health products
  • Investments
  • Charities
  • Recovery scams

TIPS FOR AVOIDING TELEMARKETING FRAUD

  • Remember the caller is NOT your friend
  • The caller only wants your money
  • Don’t be pushed into a decision
  • Your best protection is to HANG UP
  • Do not give out personal information such as credit card, Social Security, or bank account numbers, unless you initiated the call.

FEDERAL TELEMARKETING SALES RULES

Telemarketers must tell you:

  • The name of their company
  • The fact it is a sales call
  • What is being sold
  • You cannot be asked to pay anything for a prize
  • You cannot be asked to pay anything in advance for services
  • If you tell them not to call again, they can’t

LINKS:

Federal Trade Commission

American Association of Retired Persons

 
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