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Press Release

United States Attorney Brandon B. Brown Recognizes World Elder Abuse Awareness Day

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of Louisiana

SHREVEPORT, La. – United States Attorney Brandon B. Brown joined national, state, local, and Tribal leaders today in recognizing World Elder Abuse Awareness Day (WEAAD). Since 2006, WEAAD has been commemorated to promote awareness and increases understanding of the many forms of elder abuse as well as the resources available to those at risk. Highlighting the partnership between law enforcement and the public, U.S. Attorney Brown emphasized the importance of awareness and education.

“As people like our grade school teachers, little league softball coaches, childhood dance instructors, and family members get older, they become increasingly more susceptible to the cunning and conniving tactics of schemers who operate worldwide,” said United States Attorney Brandon B. Brown.  “We have a duty as government officials to do all we can to bring awareness to how these schemers operate and prosecute those who unjustly enrich themselves to the detriment of our seniors.”

Elder abuse is an act that knowingly, intentionally, or negligently causes or creates a serious risk of harm to an older person by a family member, caregiver, or other person in a trust relationship. Such harm may be financial, physical, sexual, or psychological. The Justice Department maintains a variety of programs and initiatives to combat elder abuse.

The Transnational Elder Fraud Task Force marshals federal and state agencies working collaboratively to investigate and prosecute foreign-based schemes that target older Americans. In addition to aggressively investigating the individuals, organizations, and networks responsible for these crimes, this initiative provides the public with information to guard against both traditional scams, like tech support fraud, as well as trending schemes, such as romance scams.

Using one scam to perpetrate or conceal another, some fraudsters rely on money mules to move the proceeds of their illegal activity. Preying on the good will or financial vulnerability of their targets, scammers recruit people, many times older victims, to participate in schemes to move money in ways that avoid notice. The Money Mule Initiative identifies and addresses money mule activity to disrupt these fraud schemes, and helps people to recognize and avoid participation in perpetuating fraud.

To help older individuals and their families identify and avoid fraudulent activity, the Justice Department provides Senior Scam Alerts with information about the tactics used in specific schemes. For example, in Social Security Administration Impostor schemes, scammers impersonate government administrators and falsely reporting suspicious activity to request that the victims provide their Social Security number for confirmation. In Tech Support scams, fraudsters contact victims, sometimes through internet pop-up messages, to warn about non-existent computer problems, ask that the victim give them remote access to their computer, and identify a non-existent problem, then demand large sums of money for unnecessary services. In Lottery scams, telemarketers falsely notify victims that they have won a sweepstakes and tell them they must first pay fees for shipping, insurance, customs duties, or taxes before they can claim their prizes.

To learn more about the department’s elder justice efforts please visit the Elder Justice Initiative page.

The Western District of Louisiana continues to work with federal, state, local, and Tribal law enforcement partners to investigate and prosecute elder abuse crimes.

Most recently, a federal grand jury in this district returned an indictment in April charging 21 defendants in connection with a federal bank fraud case wherein the government alleges these defendants defrauded elderly victim, many who were veterans, by stealing their personal banking information.

In a separate case, two defendants were convicted after being hired by a family to offer sitting services to an elderly woman living in a nursing home suffering from a mental disease. These defendants inflated their timesheets purporting to have provided sitting services to the infirmed victim that the victim never received.

We are committed to prosecuting these cases, but we need your help. To report elder fraud, contact the dedicated National Elder Fraud Hotline at 1-833-FRAUD-11 or 1-833-372-8311 and visit the FBI’s IC3 Elder Fraud Complaint Center at IC3.gov. 

 

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Updated June 14, 2024

Topic
Elder Justice