Elder abuse often involves scams and fraud

Jun. 22—Financial scams and fraud are the most common forms of elder abuse according to Troy Downing, Montana State Auditor and Commissioner of Securities and Insurance.

He was in Polson last week, along with representatives from Elder Protective Services, staffers from Downing's office, Jake Santee from Sen. Steve Daines' office, members of the Western Montana Justice Council, and Carla Baker, U.S. States Attorney for the District of Montana. They gave a presentation on elder abuse prevention last Thursday at the Polson Senior Citizens Center.

The theme of the meeting could be "if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is."

Downing said his department regulates the insurance and securities industry. "On the security side we investigate and prosecute financial fraud — ponzi schemes, multi-level marketing schemes, and investment frauds," Downing said.

"Looking at the crimes we investigate and prosecute, the lion's share of these are against the older population," he added, which makes sense because many older people have accumulated capital.

Eastern Montana has an Elder Justice Task Force to protect and educate seniors. Seeing a need to expand this, Governor Gianforte signed an order to replicate their work and form Elder Justice Councils around the state.

To help with this goal, Downing's office created a Financial Abuse Specialist Team (FAST) as a resource for people when they hear about frauds being perpetrated.

"The best outcome for the work that we do is not putting people in jail," Downing stated. "The best outcome is to prevent it from happening in the first place."

Some common scams

Downing mentioned some the things his office is seeing "that really scares me":

—Romance schemes: People are lonely and looking for companionship, and they develop remote relationships. At some point there's an emergency. The person might need a plane ticket or his/her house is getting foreclosed on. The victim will send money; and all of a sudden, the person disappears.

—Artificial intelligence: A person can take a couple of pictures of the victim, and then replicate the photos in different clothes. Now there are apps that can animate the photos, Downing said, and "They are very very believable."

—The Grandkid scam: Someone will text or email the grandparents that their grandchild is in trouble, in jail in Mexico for example, and needs the grandparents to send money to rescue them. People have been told to ask to hear the kid's voice. However, since every young person has a sample of his or her voice online via TikTok or Instagram or YouTube, the kid's voice can be reproduced. "And it's only going to get better," Downing said,