In a small condo in Los Angeles, in the shadows of Hollywood, an 82-year-old retiree named Ron* lived alone. No kids, no wife, not even an ex to pester him with an outdated honey-do list. From the windows of his condo, Ron couldn't see the famous Hollywood sign, but he knew it was there. So much went on outside those windows, a whole glittering world. The stars that appeared on the big screens of multiplexes were real, and they lived just around the corner from Ron, just outside those windows, but they might as well have been the stars twinkling in the sky.
In the summer of 2013, when Ron's phone rang and the man on the other end of the line gave him a pitch, Ron listened. He had a good mind to hang up on the caller and go back to whatever was playing on the television. And yet, that voice made him want to listen. The voice was friendly. The voice was persuasive. The voice promised a Mercedes. The voice promised a lottery to the tune of $250,000. And Ron listened to every word. He'd never won anything in his life. He wasn't completely convinced he had won anything now. But he listened anyway. The voice said this call will change your life forever and, for once, the voice wasn't lying.
The elder fraud epidemic
Elder fraud didn't begin with the advent of telephones or cutting-edge technology, though these inventions have allowed thieves easier access to other people's money. A 2011 study by MetLife tabbed the bill of financial fraud against American seniors at $2.9 billion a year. The actual number is much higher, as the vast majority of elder abuse cases go unreported due to the victim's fear, embarrassment or refusal to turn in the perpetrator.
According to a report released by the 2015 White House Conference on Aging, "Elder abuse is a serious public health problem affecting millions of older Americans each year, with some studies suggesting that as few as one in 23 cases is reported to authorities."
With the aging population doubling over the next several decades and wily criminals inventing new ways to exploit the elderly, those numbers are poised to explode. "In 2050, the number of Americans aged 65 and older is projected to be 88.5 million, more than double its projected population of 40.2 million in 2010," according to a U.S. Census Bureau study from that year.
The variety of schemes to pry money away from elder Americans is dizzying, and the man who scammed Ron comes in many guises. Sometimes he wears the face of a Bernie Madoff, who makes headlines by stealing billions from wealthy clients through Ponzi schemes; sometimes he's a Nigerian prince asking for a good-faith payment; sometimes he's a conniving family member who seeks a hefty nest egg. Sometimes, though, he's the waiter at your favorite restaurant, who takes your credit card and disappears around a corner to run your card through a device called a skimmer. The skimmer costs as little as $19.95 on Amazon or eBay, takes less than a second to record your card information and can store up to 10,000 cards at a time.
But no matter the face the man assumes, he is the same man, a man who often preys on the confusion, the trust, the loneliness of strangers who are willing to buy his line. He is, for lack of a better word, a crook, and he is everywhere. And if you're not taking the precautions to protect your assets and identity, then more than likely he already has your information.
*Client names and some details were changed to protect client privacy.
Identity theft and the evangelist
"The elderly are only the second most targeted demographic of financial crooks," says Cary Johnson, Director of Crime Prevention with the Jefferson County Colorado District Attorney's office. Johnson is speaking to a group of widows at one of the nation's largest megachurches in the affluent Denver suburb of Highlands Ranch. The setting suits Johnson, who served in the clergy in California and Oregon for 22 years before becoming an evangelist against financial fraud.
"Do you know who's number one?"
There's just enough fire and brimstone in Johnson's words to get the ladies to sit up and take notice. He pauses and scans the faces of the widows whose chairs form a circle around him.
"Well, do you?"
Johnson's voice stops just short of belligerence. Periodically, during a talk, he likes poking the elders who attend his workshops to make sure they're awake and paying attention. The ladies shake their heads that they don't have a clue as to the answer. Even the lady beside me, who's seated in a Rascal and wearing a neck brace, gives her head a little wiggle.
"The number one age group targeted by identity thieves is 18- to 25-year-olds!"
The widows gasp. That's their kids and grandkids, their babies. "Almost all of our identity theft is related to meth addiction. That's who's doing it. It's moving to heroin, if you can believe that. But it's meth for now," Johnson says.
The news is almost too much for the room. There's a collective inhale. Someone says, "Oh, Lord!" Perhaps a blasphemous offense under normal conditions inside these walls, but quickly forgiven considering the subject at hand.
"And we're the meth hub for the United States. Denver is the meth hub."
"Oh my!" says the woman with the neck brace. "Oh my! Oh my! Oh my!"
"Yeah," Johnson says, acknowledging her shocked response. "With the great Northeast/Southwest highway system, we're perfect to move all the meth. And Colorado is usually about fifth in the U.S. for identity theft. California is number one."
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) estimates that about nine million Americans are victims of identity theft each year, and Johnson would like to get that number to zero with meetings like this one. In 2001, the Denver District Attorney's office received a Justice Assistance Grant from the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, with the aim of developing a crime prevention program to keep older adults safe. In 2002, they brought in Johnson — who was serving as a police chaplain at the time — to guide the Crime Prevention Program.
"Initially, the plan was to train clergy and have them teach their congregations how to be safe," he tells me in an earlier interview. "But too many of them didn't feel comfortable with speaking about the topic themselves, so I told them, 'Why don't you call me when your people are together. I'll speak directly to the elderly.' We did 125 programs the first year."
A few years later, with the program expanded beyond churches, Johnson was conducting 220 seminars, going anywhere people were willing to meet and hear a talk on financial fraud. Since those early days, Johnson has developed programs throughout Colorado and trained educators around the country on how to keep America's elderly safe from financial fraud and identity theft.
"I've given as many as five workshops in a day," Johnson says. "Sometimes, it gets insane, seriously."
"You must love it though, right?" I ask.
"I do love it. To this day, I've done more than 1,500 of these workshops and I still love it. I love getting in front of audiences. I love thinking that these people are going to be safer when I leave."
Ron revisited
By the time Christian Cordoba learned of the scam against Ron, the thieves had taken $170,000 of the retiree's assets.
Cordoba is a retirement specialist in Southern California. With his high cheekbones and bright smile, he has the polished good looks of the news anchors that grace the TV screens of Angelenos from Palm Desert to Palos Verdes. Two decades ago, Ron was referred by a client of Cordoba, who has managed some of Ron's assets ever since.
"One day in 2014, one of my assistants contacted me about Ron," says Cordoba, who is the president and founder of El Segundo-based California Retirement Advisors and offers securities through First Allied Securities, Inc., a registered broker/dealer. "Ron received a monthly distribution from his account, but he had been making additional requests for distributions above the set monthly amounts, and that raised a red flag." Cordoba, says the requests from Ron were becoming more frequent, more urgent, and they called Ron to see what was going on.
At first, Ron's answers seemed reasonable. He needed to pay back a personal loan to a friend. He had car repairs. Those crazy California property taxes were due. At a certain point though, Ron ran out of excuses to give and began recycling the reasons why he needed the extra money.