AARP Hearing Center
Four congressmen asked the FBI this week to investigate “foreign entities” that are targeting veterans on Facebook by posing as veterans service organizations.
The issue was raised by Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA), which first became aware of an imposter account using its name and logo in August 2017. The fake Facebook page had a quarter of a million followers by the time it shut down, more than the official VVA account, VVA said.
The imposters’ objectives remain unclear, but they spread false news that could make veterans panic over issues such as having their benefits cut, said Kristofer Goldsmith, chief investigator at the VVA.
“That could take an already vulnerable veteran and crush their mental state,” Goldsmith said.
He sees not only a potential risk of spreading misinformation, but also a risk of scams such as attempts to lure veterans into making donations to imposter groups, especially if the fake website appears to be legitimate. The imposters have the potential of stealing bank account information and building up debt in a victim’s name. There is an additional security risk since some veterans hold security clearances.
“It seems like Vietnam veterans and our organization is a really popular target — my guess is because most of the members are on average 72 years old,” Goldsmith said. “Foreign adversaries look at that population especially.”
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In the letter to FBI Directory Christopher Wray, four lawmakers — Reps. Gil Cisneros, D-Calif; Don Bacon, R-Neb.; Ted Lieu, D-Calif.; and Greg Steube, R-Fla. — mentioned that veterans organizations “tracking foreign entities have received little support from the U.S. government.”
Goldsmith said that the VVA wrote letters to the FBI and Department of Justice and “never got a response from anyone in the administration.”
The letter suggests that more than one veterans organization has been targeted, but VVA is the only one that confirmed the attacks when discussing it with AARP.
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