Brampton woman, 86. says scammers threatened her after she refused to send them $10K
CBC
An 86-year-old Brampton, Ont., woman is warning other seniors to be extra vigilant after scammers tried to swindle her out of $10,000, and resorted to making threatening phone calls when she refused to send them money.
Joan said she got the first call at approximately 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 3, from a man who identified himself as Officer Spring. CBC News has agreed not to use her full name because she's concerned for her safety.
The man told Joan that during a police traffic stop, they found drugs in the trunk of a car in which her grandson was travelling.
"He said, 'We're going to have to take him to the station … [and] you have to post a $10,000 bond,"' she told CBC Toronto.
Police services across the Greater Toronto Area have recently reported an increase in the number of scams in which thieves demand that seniors send thousands of dollars to get their grandchild out of jail. The elaborate hoax involves at least two people on a call, with one posing as a police officer and another as the desperate grandchild.
Joan said the man told her the cash bond was necessary in case her grandson decided to run.
"I said, 'Well do I get the money back?' He said, 'Yes.' He said, `We have to send the blood test away to get results and you'll get the money back in two weeks.'"
Joan said another person — who she thought was her grandson — came on the phone.
"I said, 'What's wrong' [and] he said, 'Please don't hang up, I only get one call. I need $10,000, please don't tell anybody, please don't tell my mom, she'll get mad and she will yell at me, you know what she's like.'"
Joan said the scammers were so persistent that even when she told them she has a disability and can't go out, they offered to come and take her to the bank.
After the scammer hung up, Joan said she decided to call her grandson. She told him what happened and he told her it was a scam.
When the scammer called back, Joan said she told them her grandson was with her and she knew it was a scam. But she said they continued to press her for money — calling her at least four times that day.
"The next day, he calls back, he says, 'Well, did you get the cash?' I said, 'No I didn't, I can't get it, I don't have that money,' and he said, 'You better get the cash.'"
He said the caller became rude and threatening, telling her she was "old and senile."