> This is why lists of "elderly owned" phone numbers go for so much on the black/gray market.
My grandmother started developing dementia about three years ago. What is really disturbing, is that the scammers somehow figured it out about a year before her symptoms started really presenting themselves. It eventually got to the point where they were calling and asking for her by name several times a month.
She has a fairly large retirement fund, and I think they may be try to get access to it specifically. I am horrified at how sophisticated these operations have become. When they had her on the phone, they must have asked her lots of questions that they used to make a dossier of her, and have been passing this dossier from scam agency to agency. It is clearly a call center calling her, and I have experimented with them. I ask them to call back, and they asked when would be a good time to call back. And then a different person returns the call, clearly reading from a script and already knowing personal information about her.
One thing I am concerned about is that they are simply pumping her for information, so that they can impersonate her and try to initiate a money transfer directly with the bank.
It is so disturbing that there are people out there who know who my grandmother is, and are trying to take advantage of her.
The YouTuber Kitboga mentioned above got into the scambaiting thing because someone took advantage of his grandmother suffering from dementia. It really is a terribly abusive con, and one can learn a lot about their methods and intents from watching his channel.
My grandmother started developing dementia about three years ago. What is really disturbing, is that the scammers somehow figured it out about a year before her symptoms started really presenting themselves. It eventually got to the point where they were calling and asking for her by name several times a month.
She has a fairly large retirement fund, and I think they may be try to get access to it specifically. I am horrified at how sophisticated these operations have become. When they had her on the phone, they must have asked her lots of questions that they used to make a dossier of her, and have been passing this dossier from scam agency to agency. It is clearly a call center calling her, and I have experimented with them. I ask them to call back, and they asked when would be a good time to call back. And then a different person returns the call, clearly reading from a script and already knowing personal information about her.
One thing I am concerned about is that they are simply pumping her for information, so that they can impersonate her and try to initiate a money transfer directly with the bank.
It is so disturbing that there are people out there who know who my grandmother is, and are trying to take advantage of her.