En español | Older people like to think they're more worldly wise than the young. But does that mean the 50-plus set is less likely to fall for scams? Turns out it depends on what kind of scam.
In a new report, the Internet Crime Complaint Center (pdf) says it received nearly 315,000 fraud complaints in 2011, with the bad guys making off with $485 million. (Known as IC3, the center is jointly run by the FBI and the nonprofit National White Collar Crime Center.) Analysis of victims' ages suggests that older people are particularly likely to fall for schemes in which the crooks claim to be government officials. Romance cons, too, were hard for older people to resist.
Here's the lowdown on the top five flimflams.
1. Work from home
Generating 17,352 complaints, the number one spot goes to an especially dangerous version of the work-from-home "opportunity." Through advertisements in newspapers, online job sites, emails and social networking sites, scammers recruit innocent job seekers as "mules" to unknowingly steal or launder money. They work at their computers, thinking they're a "money transfer agent" or a "payment processing agent" for a legitimate business, but in fact they're moving stolen money abroad and unwittingly disguising its true origins. The scammers may also compromise the victims' own accounts or identities.
Overall, victims lost $20 million total through identity theft and account tampering, averaging $1,160 per victim. "Regrettably, due to their participation, these individuals may face criminal charges" for check fraud and receiving and moving stolen goods, notes the report.
Losses to the 50-plus: $8.4 million
Men
50-59: 1st in complaints, losses of $2.8 million
60-plus: 5th in complaints, losses of $2 million
Women
50-59: 4th in complaints, losses of $2 million
60-plus: 5th in complaints, losses of $1.5 million
The most complaints were filed by those in their 20s, but people in their 50s lost the most money.
2. Government official impersonation
There were 14,350 complaints about emails that falsely claim to come from a government agency. Fast-growing are FBI fakers demanding money to prevent arrest, but the category also includes emails that seek money and personal information and purport to be from the IRS, Social Security Administration, Medicare or other agencies. In truth, government agencies do not send unsolicited emails. The total losses were $3.5 million, with a per-victim loss of $245.
Losses to the 50-plus: $2.2 million
Men
50-59: 1st in complaints, losses of $328,000
60-plus: 2nd in complaints, losses of $1.1 million
Women
50-59: 1st in complaints, losses of $501,000
60-plus: 4th in complaints, losses of $250,000
Over-60s lost the most money, $1.35 million, with those in their 50s in 2nd place at $829,000.
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