This isn’t my favorite topic. But it’s a necessary one these days, when a seemingly endless number of companies and individuals are intent on separating us from our money. Some of them will use any means, fair or foul.
I’m going to share a story about a longtime friend (I’ve changed his name) whose kindness and generous nature were used against him when he was vulnerable.
This could be you
As much as anyone I’ve ever known, my friend (I’ll call him Bill) was a gentle man and a gentleman. He treated everybody with respect; he was honest and trustworthy. And he was always willing to help somebody in need.
A few years ago his wife passed away, and Bill came to regard opening his mail as a daily highlight.
We all know the usual content of the mail. If you separated your mail into two piles, one for people or organizations sending you money and the other for people or organizations wanting your money, almost everything would go on the second pile.
Now imagine that reality from Bill’s point of view: The mail is an important regular event, you read every piece of mail, and you never want to say no.
Bill’s generosity was his ticket to a growing number of mailing lists that charitable organizations bought and sold.
Fortunately, Bill made friends with a woman who we’ll call Anita, a nurse he had met at a hospital during his wife’s last illness. Anita lived near Bill and eventually became his caregiver.
One day when Anita stopped by his house, Bill told her he had just gone to the bank. What she heard prompted her to offer to help with his bills and finances.
Bill always answered the phone, and the previous day he had said yes to somebody who asked him to wire money directly from his bank account.
Bill wired $1,600. The following day, the same person called back to say that the wire transfer had not gone through. He asked Bill to send the $1,600 again.
Bill went to the bank and (fortunately for him but not for the scammer), the teller knew Bill. She not only stopped him from making that transaction, but also helped him report a fraud claim.
Anita soon learned that in just one month, Bill had written 108 checks to 14 charities and political organizations. The checks were small, usually $10 to $25 each. But they added up to a hefty financial outflow.
Then she found that Bill had somehow signed up for monthly withdrawals from his bank account for things like “internet repair services,” extended warranties on items he no longer owned, and undefined technical support. He was unaware of these “services” he had been buying.
At his bank’s suggestion, Bill closed his account, though he didn’t want to because he had memorized the account number.
Anita suspected that he was being taken advantage of in other ways. Oh, was she ever right.
She noticed he was receiving large boxes filled with materials that apparently were part of a “start your own business from home” scheme he had signed up for, thinking it would give him something to do. She opened one of the boxes and discovered it contained an invoice for $325 for “supplies and pamphlets.”
The damage from that particular scam was much larger, as I discovered when I got involved. All told, Bill’s efforts to keep busy and be useful cost him more than $100,000.
Fortunately, Bill completely trusted Anita, and soon she got his financial affairs under control. Among other things, she persuaded him to let her review whatever checks he wrote before he put them in the mail. And she set up a laptop in a way that made it easy for them to monitor his bank account.
Unfortunately, many other seniors don’t have somebody like Anita to help them.
With a friend like this, do you need an enemy?
Sometimes, the “helper” turns out to be the scoundrel.
I knew a retired couple who relied on the choir director at their church for investment advice. When they inherited $50,000 — a very substantial sum to them — they turned to this “friend.”
The choir director was not a fiduciary adviser, and he had become very good at gaining the trust of parishioners. (Maybe you can sense where this is going.)
From any objective viewpoint, this couple had a pretty low risk tolerance; they could not afford to lose this money.
Nevertheless, once he learned of the inheritance, the choir director persuaded this couple to invest in limited partnerships, thus earning himself some hefty sales commissions.
One limited partnership was invested in a coal-mining venture. Another was financing a grove of palm trees in South America.
If I hadn’t intervened, the couple most likely would have lost all their money while the choir director kept his commissions. But after we threatened legal action against the choir director and the firm he worked for, the couple recovered all their money.
Another story comes from a friend who worked for a moving and storage company.
An elderly man living in a downtown Seattle hotel, with daily visits from a paid caregiver, occasionally ordered things online. He received packages that, with the hotel’s blessing, were delivered directly to his room.
Read: Beware of lottery and sweepstakes scams
One day a UPS driver realized she was delivering six to eight packages a day to this man, and she sensed something might be amiss. It didn’t take long for the driver to determine that most of the deliveries were things the caregiver had ordered for herself, of course charging them to the man’s credit card.
Fortunately, the solution was simple: a new credit card number — and a new caregiver.
There are countless other ways older people fall victim to those who want their money, any way they can get it. COVID-19 scams. Banking scams. Phone scams. IRS scams. Charity scams. Investment scams. Pyramid schemes.
Read: Watch out for these holiday scams
The U.S. government has created an excellent online resource to help identify these and more, and to protect yourself or somebody you care about.
If you use email, you are a target. You may get messages asking you to confirm “account information” including your phone number and shipping address. Maybe there’s “a problem with your bank account” — even a bank where you don’t have an account.
Protect yourself
What to do: Maybe the No. 1 all-purpose suggestion I have is to simply slow down. No transaction you’re likely to make is so urgent that it can’t wait for you to think about it or get a second opinion from someone who has earned your trust.
Educate yourself at the government’s website. Don’t give out personal information by phone unless you initiated the call.
I hate the need to give blanket advice to be suspicious. But as too many people have learned the hard way, that can be very good advice. In fact, that advice could save you more dollars than you care to think about.