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Carisa Kelly was filled with rage and frustration last summer after criminals stole $300,000 from her 73-year-old mother in an elaborate computer help desk scam.
“My mom was victimized,” Kelly says, “but it affected the whole family.”
Her mother, who lives alone in the Pacific Northwest, hid what was happening from her loved ones.
Gone are the retirement investments her mother carefully accrued over several decades, along with funds her mother had earmarked for her family’s future: down payments on homes for her children and college tuition for her grandchildren. “On top of everything, my mother may have to sell her house to cover the tax debt,” says Kelly, a New York City costume designer who’s had to spend hundreds of hours reporting the scam and looking for ways to recover the stolen money.
The Kelly family is not alone. In a 2023 Gallup poll, 15 percent of Americans said a household member had been deceived into giving money or financial information to a scammer over the previous 12 months—far more than those who had their car stolen or home burglarized, or who endured a mugging. The impact on spouses, children and other family members can be profound but is often ignored, says criminologist Katalin Parti, an associate professor at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia.
When a loved one becomes a scam victim, “family members are often the secondary victims,” says Parti, who is studying the experiences of scam victims and their relatives. “You go through a process that’s emotionally taxing. You may lose emotional or physical connection to your loved one. You may feel alone and isolated. You may have to take care of your parent like never before. And you may lose money if you’re now supporting them or loaned them money that was stolen by scammers.”
When scams hit home: Kelly’s family’s story
The scam involving Kelly’s mother began the day Kelly arrived for a visit last July. “She picked us up at the airport and seemed nervous,” Kelly says. “She almost hit a pedestrian and another car, so I took over.” Then Kelly and her mother came down with COVID and isolated in separate rooms. Her mother, a retired social worker, seemed secretive, but Kelly thought she was doing paperwork related to setting up services for foster children. “She was retired, but still doing trainings,” Kelly says.
In reality, a team of criminals was calling her every day, impersonating computer-company workers, an investment company officer and even a U.S. marshal. The calls sometimes lasted two to three hours. The scammers convinced her that her investment account had been hacked to buy child pornography. They instructed her to protect the rest of her money by transferring it to her bank account, using the funds to buy gold, packing it in a shoebox and handing it over. She did so, even when one bank manager refused the transfer and a gold store employee warned her it could be a scam.
“She was liquidating her investment account while I was in the next room,” Kelly says. “She was told she would get a certified check from the government and an IRS letter forgiving her tax burden and that her money was going to the Federal Reserve.”
Instead, it vanished.
When Kelly found out what had been happening, she felt devastated and wondered what clues she’d missed that could have helped her end the criminal abuse of her mother.
“My mom has lived by herself for a long time,” she says. “We talk or text each other every day. But she thought she was protecting me by keeping it from me.”
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