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|    soc.retirement    |    For seniors: retirement, aging, geronto    |    157,025 messages    |
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|    Message 156,998 of 157,025    |
|    Darnell to All    |
|    He said her daughter had been in a car c    |
|    24 Jan 26 04:07:52    |
      XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, ba.politics, sac.politics       XPost: talk.politics.guns       From: darnell@fomoco.com              Police are investigating a scammer who targeted an elderly Berkeley       woman last month by claiming her daughter needed money to get out of       jail.              The case began in December when the 91-year-old woman got a call from a       stranger who said her daughter was in jail after hurting someone in a       car wreck.              In the background, the woman "could hear someone … pretending to be her       daughter," Berkeley police wrote in court papers.              The man said the younger woman needed $15,000 in bail money to be       released.              He told the older woman "not to tell anyone else about their phone call"       — a red flag — police said.              The woman tried to call her daughter to confirm the story, but the call       would not go through.              "She became concerned and decided to get the money out from her bank,"       police wrote.              When she went to her bank on Solano Avenue, the teller would only let       her withdraw $5,000.              She took the money home and waited for instructions, and was ultimately       told to give the cash to a man who would come to her house.              When a Black man in his 40s pulled up outside in a white Toyota sedan,       she handed over the money.              Eventually, she was able to reach her daughter — and realized it had all       been a scam.              For now, no arrests have been made and the case remains under       investigation.              According to the FBI, "millions of elderly Americans fall victim to some       type of financial fraud or confidence scheme" each year, "including       romance, lottery, and sweepstakes scams — just to name a few."              "Seniors are often targeted because they tend to be trusting and       polite," the FBI writes. "They also usually have financial savings, own       a home, and have good credit — all of which make them attractive to       scammers."              Tips to stay safe include recognizing scam attempts and ending all       communication with the perpetrator; never giving personal information or       valuables to "unverified people or businesses"; and creating a shared       verbal family password or phrase that no one else knows.              "Resist the pressure to act quickly," the FBI writes. "Scammers create a       sense of urgency to produce fear and lure victims into immediate       action."              https://www.berkeleyscanner.com/2026/01/24/crime/berkeley-elder-abuse-sca       m-daughter-car-crash-jail-bail/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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